Monday, February 27, 2017

AA

 




0000000000000000000000000000000000

 


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<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

00000000000000000000000000000000000000000

 

 

****************************************

 

 

 


<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
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<td>
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</center>

<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

 

 

###############################

 

 

###############################

 


<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
<center>

<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="16%">
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<td>


<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="0">
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<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

 

7777777777777777777777777

 

 

7777777777777777777777


<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
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<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="16%">
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</td></tr></tbody></table>
</center>
<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

 

555555555555555555555

 

 



<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
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<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

 

00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

 


a
Photo:
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b
Photo:
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c
Photo:
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d
Photo:
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e
Photo:
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f
Photo:
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g
Photo:
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h
Photo:
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i
Photo:
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k
Photo:
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l
Photo:
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m
Photo:
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1

Photo:

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2
Photo:
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3
Photo:
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4


https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/8yF1i0ej4IA2_lYIWgEiDjxlKfmrz7RDvsjrlIpn473GLAQx51FJ6j0F7B5IvuTQiOn85EoiitfDW3AY6irlO_FlMYAJRE5-pO9JFg=w5-h1-rw-no"

5


https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/FwbHBbysgzNpXjDDCZmWxByO_xBRE7valDskBkSzn0qkF9kkB4eRIyg8ZE4Hy5GweT_Y-Mqro3LyRY0Sj-R2eRi-5kCKc2_Cv5XI5A=w1-h5-rw-no


6


[img src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/yG8xBbltK_w5R15lzOxpwBm-Cp1QMfbxxf5iOSYdTk3EXGF5aI1egFv_huqytg7oN6yt1HlTkQ0G-UQZxKU5l0yEdeiMotfdZMRPLxg=w614-h319-rw-no"]


7


Chỉ cần nắm rõ căn bản ngữ vựng của tiếng VIỆT ngày nay là có thể học và hiểu ngay những tiếng VIỆT khác trong BÁCH VIỆT.

 

==============================


8



Chỉ cần nắm rõ căn bản ngữ vựng của tiếng VIỆT ngày nay là có thể học và hiểu ngay những tiếng VIỆT khác trong BÁCH VIỆT.

 

Saturday, February 25, 2017

A

 


0000000000000000000000000000000000

 


<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
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</td>
<td>
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</center>

<center>

<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="16%">
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<td>


<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
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</td>
<td>
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="0">
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<td style="" border="0" background="http://i626.photobucket.com/albums/tt346/Quynh494/hng_dc.png" height="23" width="23">
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<td style="" border="0" background="http://i626.photobucket.com/albums/tt346/Quynh494/xanhl_ngang.png" height="23" width="23">
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<td style="" border="0" background="http://i626.photobucket.com/albums/tt346/Quynh494/xanhl_ngang.png" height="23" width="23">
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</td></tr></tbody></table>
</center>

<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

00000000000000000000000000000000000000000

 

 

****************************************

 

 

 


<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
<center>

<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="16%">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>


<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="0">
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</td>
<td>
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</tr></tbody></table>

</td></tr></tbody></table>
</center>

<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

 

 

###############################

 

 

###############################

 


<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
<center>

<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="16%">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>


<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="0">
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</td>
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<td style="" border="0" background="http://i626.photobucket.com/albums/tt346/Quynh494/xanhl_ngang.png" height="23" width="23">
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</td></tr></tbody></table> </center>
<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

 

7777777777777777777777777

 

 

7777777777777777777777


<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
<center>

<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="16%">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>


<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="0">
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<td style="" border="0" background="http://i626.photobucket.com/albums/tt346/Quynh494/xanhl_ngang.png" height="23" width="23">

</td></tr></tbody></table>

</td></tr></tbody></table>
</center>
<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

 

555555555555555555555

 

 



<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
<center>

<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="0">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td style="" border="0" background="https://gp3.googleusercontent.com/UICghzvEu5s82d4rr1aoW-RQsGwGtwrdtvZssh6alv2fP9zcLSwYP1VUENmjyev2YHdLR-j2mtfDK1VBMyDiIxupyt7Hu-bnkNoyv4Q=s48-rw-no" height="23" width="23">
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</center>
<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>

 

A A

 



Binh Chủng Thủy quân Lục chiến Việt Nam Cộng Hòa

Binh Chủng Thủy quân Lục chiến Việt Nam Cộng Hòa, là lực lượng tác chiến đổ bộ đường thủy, đồng thời là lực lượng Tổng trừ bị trực thuộc Bộ Tổng tham mưu Quân lực Việt Nam Cộng Hòa. Đây được xem là lực lượng quân sự thiện chiến và cơ động nhất của Việt Nam Cộng Hòa được hỗ trợ quân vận từ Thủy Xa Lội Nước LVT-5 của Hải Quân Việt Nam Cộng Hòa. Nhiệm vụ chính của binh chủng ban đầu là hành quân thủy bộ, kiểm soát vùng ven biển và sông ngòi miền Nam. Về sau trở thành một đơn vị tổng trừ bị, sẵn sàng tác chiến cơ động trên cả bốn vùng chiến thuật VNCH và các mặt trận ngoại biên. Đơn vị được tổ chức, huấn luyện và chiến đấu nguyên mẫu, được nhận xét là một đơn vị dày dặn kinh nghiệm nhất trong Quân Lực Việt Nam Cộng Hòa. Bộ Tư Lệnh sư đoàn đặt tại Trại Bạch Đằng Sài Gòn..



 

A

 



Binh Chủng Thủy quân Lục chiến Việt Nam Cộng Hòa

Binh Chủng Thủy quân Lục chiến Việt Nam Cộng Hòa, là lực lượng tác chiến đổ bộ đường thủy, đồng thời là lực lượng Tổng trừ bị trực thuộc Bộ Tổng tham mưu Quân lực Việt Nam Cộng Hòa. Đây được xem là lực lượng quân sự thiện chiến và cơ động nhất của Việt Nam Cộng Hòa được hỗ trợ quân vận từ Thủy Xa Lội Nước LVT-5 của Hải Quân Việt Nam Cộng Hòa. Nhiệm vụ chính của binh chủng ban đầu là hành quân thủy bộ, kiểm soát vùng ven biển và sông ngòi miền Nam. Về sau trở thành một đơn vị tổng trừ bị, sẵn sàng tác chiến cơ động trên cả bốn vùng chiến thuật VNCH và các mặt trận ngoại biên. Đơn vị được tổ chức, huấn luyện và chiến đấu nguyên mẫu, được nhận xét là một đơn vị dày dặn kinh nghiệm nhất trong Quân Lực Việt Nam Cộng Hòa. Bộ Tư Lệnh sư đoàn đặt tại Trại Bạch Đằng Sài Gòn..



 

A A A

 

HỘI NHẬP VỚI THẾ GIỚI

Hội nhập với thế giới cũng có nghĩa là cái gì hay của nhân loại thì mình bắt chước. Chẳng hạn môn túc cầu do người Anh nghĩ ra nhưng dân Ba Tây bắt chước và bắt chước hay quá cho nên nói tới túc cầu bây giờ, thế giới nghĩ tới Ba Tây chứ không nghĩ tới Anh Quốc. Vậy thì bắt chước điều hay không phải là điều tủi nhục hay xấu hổ.

Ba Tây là tên của nước Brazil.
Ba Tây là nước thuộc châu Mỹ và nằm ở châu Mỹ La Tinh.
Ba Tây là vùng thuộc địa của Bồ Đào Nha. Vì thế, ngôn ngữ chính thức của quốc gia này là tiếng Bồ Đào Nha. các nước láng giềng của Ba Tây đều dùng tiếng Tây Ban Nha.




 

https://i682.photobucket.com/albums/vv190/doublenguyennguyen/c5a73864-752d-496b-accb-b9510aad6383_zpsneezxncx.jpg) repeat;




    1. Sau năm 1954, sau chiến thắng Ðiện Biên Phủ, Hiệp Định Geneve đã được ký kết ngày 27/10/1954 chấm dứt chiến tranh Ðông Dương lần thứ nhất. Trong thời gian chủ tịch Hồ Chí Minh lãnh đạo chính quyền miền Bắc, tại sao một triệu người miền Bắc đã phải lên tàu đua nhau bỏ chạy vào miền Nam để cho “Mỹ - Diệm kìm kẹp” mà không ở lại cùng nhà nước Việt Nam Dân Chủ Cộng Hòa và chủ tịch HCM?
    Số một triệu người này có thể còn nhiều lần hơn nếu nhà nước không dùng bạo lực ngăn chặn, không cho họ ra đi?


    Tại sao ngoại trừ một số các cán bộ đảng viên cộng sản tập kết ra Bắc, người dân miền Nam lại không đua nhau chạy ra Bắc theo chế độ cộng sản của chủ tịch HCM, mà đa số cứ nhất quyết ở lại cho “Mỹ - Diệm kìm kẹp”? Theo Hiệp Định Geneve thì lúc đó mọi người được hoàn toàn tự do lựa chọn đi ra miền Bắc hay ở lại miền Nam cơ mà??




    2. Tại sao hồi còn chiến tranh Việt Nam (trước 30/4/1975), mỗi khi có giao tranh giữa quân đội miền Nam (VNCH) và bộ đội “giải phóng” thì dân chúng đều chạy về phía có lính miền Nam trú đóng, chứ không chạy về phía bộ đội “giải phóng”? Nếu dân miền Nam bị “Mỹ, Ngụy kìm kẹp”, cần phải được “giải phóng”, thì lẽ ra họ phải hồ hởi mà chạy về phía các “đồng chí bộ đội”, tay bắt mặt mừng và cám ơn “được giải phóng”, chứ sao lại bồng bế nhau mà chạy trối chết để xa lánh các “đồng chí” ấy? Ðua nhau chạy vế phía có lính miền Nam để tiếp tục bị “kìm kẹp”, không lẽ họ ngu đần đến nỗi chỉ thích bị “Mỹ, Ngụy kìm kẹp” chứ không muốn được “giải phóng” à?
































 


Để duy trì ách thống trị của mình, các cường quốc xâm lăng thường áp dụng, đối với các dân tộc bị trị, nhiều biện pháp, tuy có khác nhau về hình thức, nhưng chung qui vẫn thuộc hai loại chính:

  • Ngăn ngừa không để cho các quyền lợi kinh tế thuộc vào tay người bản xứ.

  • Kiềm hãm không để cho dân trí phát triển.

  • Các loại biện pháp thứ nhứt nhằm mục đích tiêu diệt tất cả các phương tiện vật chất của người bị trị.

  • Biện pháp thứ hai nhằm mục đích tiêu diệt những người có khả năng xử dụng các phương tiện vật chất trên.

Chính Đề Việt Nam

 

 

Anh Đã Ngủ Yên Trên Quê Hương
 photo stat_zpsoe9jsidz.jpg https://youtu.be/ddcDaxEL32o

 

Anh Đã Ngủ Yên Trên Quê Hương

Sáng tác: Trần Duy Đức

Ngoài trời vẫn còn mưa,
Người nằm dưới mộ sâu,
Ôi thiên thu phôi phai hình hài,
Hỡi người ơi tủi lòng,
Hỡi người ơi tủi lòng...
Bao năm tháng cô đơn nằm đây,
Bên bia xanh ai qua từng ngày,
Cơn mưa xuống nuôi xanh cỏ hoang,
Trên quê hương xương khô mộ gầy.
Đã ngủ yên một ngày,
Anh đã ngủ yên một đời.

Ngoài trời vẫn còn mưa,
Người nằm Dưới mộ sâu,
Trong âm u thương thay phận người,
Hỡi người ơi tủi lòng,
Hỡi người ơi tủi lòng...
Anh có biết quê hương giờ đây,
Đang điêu linh tang thương từng ngày.
Anh có biết anh em giờ đây,
Đang lao lưng mang thân tù đầy.
Sông lầm than nhọc nhằn,
Ôi sống lầm than nhọc nhằn.

Ngoài trời mưa chưa kịp tạnh,
Người nằm im trong huyệt lạnh,
Buổi chiều mưa chưa kịp tạnh,
Lòng nào chưa nguôi hờn căm?
Lạy trời cho mưa kịp tạnh,
Để người vơi cơn hận sầu,
Nguôi ngoai hận sầu.

Ngoài trời vẫn còn mưa,
Người nằm vẫn nằm đây,
Nơi hoang vu u linh nghẹn ngào,
Hỡi người ơi tủi lòng,
Hỡi người ơi tủi lòng.
Tôi đã khóc cho anh chiều nay,
Trong cơn mưa, mưa rơi lạnh đầy,
Ai sẽ khóc cho anh ngày mai,
Dâng hai tay tôi xin nguyện cầu
Dẫu niềm tin phụ người...
Ôi dẫu niềm tin phụ người.

 

 


The Gypsies


 1       When spring comes, the drom (“road”) beckons all Roms, as the Gypsies call themselves. Whether they are nomads who have stopped for the winter or sedentary Gypsies living in cities, their hearts are awakened. They believe that all land under their feel is their own.

 2       José, a Gypsy of Arles, in Provence, once told me about his youth before World War II, when he traveled with his large family in a horse-drawn caravan to Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, the west coast of France, through the Pyrenees, Montpelier, and then back to Arles again by autumn, making the same circuit year after year, selling horses and rugs and doing metalwork. "We went everywhere. We stopped in the fields, amused ourselves in the trees. If we wanted a fruit, we ate it. We were savage. We were free."

 3       The Gypsies, it is thought, wandered out of Central Asia about 4,000 years ago. They have never stopped moving. They arrived in Europe in the late Middle Ages, and used the annual religious pilgrimages they found there as pretexts for large tribal gatherings, since they ordinarily traveled in small groups to avoid the authorities. At the gatherings, they conducted family business-baptisms, marriages, trials-and exchanged news.

 4       This tradition continues today. Every May, Gypsies from all over Europe gather in the village of Les Saintes Maries-de-la Mer, in the south of France, to venerate their partron saint, Sara-Kali. The campgrounds are filled with trailers, clotheslines, and cooking fires. Inside each caravan, the entire family sleeps crowded together on the floor under feather quilts. Although they live communally, Gypsies preserve their privacy through mutual respect and strict codes of behavior; they feel there is something wrong with a man who needs to hide behind walls.

 5         The Gypsy is happiest in the natural world, where he can hear the rain at night on his caravan and smell the woods. He lives from day to day, and he likes uncertainty. He has known practically from infancy that sudden changes from comfort to discomfort are essential for a healthy life. As a result, he has a deep sense of self-reliance.

 6         Today many Gypsies have moved into the cities (there are communities in Boston, New York, Newark, and Los Angeles) or have been forced into "settlements." But they paint their ceilings blue to remind themselves of the sky, and they cover their walls with rugs to bring back the feeling of a tent. "We don't like fancy houses," José says. "We like an old house with a fireplace for heat and cooking. We eat with the fingers-no need for forks or spoons. We are free like that, and it is becauseof this that the Romany will never change. We wil always stay as we were born."

PATRICIA FOLLMER1
_____________
1"The Gypsies" by Patricia Follmer. Copyright 1974 by Harper's Magazine. Reprinted form the July 1974 issue by special permission.

HARBRACE COLLEGE HANDBOOK
ISBN: 0-15-531824-1

 



Observe how Patricia Follmer1 effectively arranges and expresses her ideas as she explains the attitudes and traditions of the nomadic Gypsies (her central idea). Notice that every paragraph sticks to the subject and refers to the titles. Give special attention to the close relationship between the beginning and the ending of the composition.

 

Planning and Writing the Whole Composition
  ....................................................................................



Arrange and express your ideas effectively.

A paragraph is usually a series of sentences developing one controlling idea: A paragraph developed by causal analysis must not only raise the question why but answer it to the satisfaction. The cause or causes must satisfactorily explain the result.

Many good paragraphs are developed not by any one specific method but by a combination of methods. Some good paragraphs almost defy analysis. The important consideration is not the specific method used but the adequacy of the development.

A whole composition is usually a series of paragraphs developing several closely related facets of one controlling, or central, idea.

Notice that every paragraph sticks to the subject and refers to the title. Give special attention to the close relationship between the beginning and the ending of the composition.

A unified composition, whether only one paragraph or a series of paragraphs, does not fall into order by chance. Order is the result of careful planning.

Choose an appropriate subject and limit it properly.

A subject is properly limited if you can treat it adequately (according to your purpose) in the time and space at your disposal.
Here are two examples of ways that a subject may be limited:

speed skating =>contests on ice => the winter games => the Olympics => Sports

cyclamate-sweetened peaches => cyclamates => additives => food preparation =>Domestic arts

Deciding on the degree of limitation is a matter of the writer’s judgment.

PURPOSE

Before making a final decision regarding the specific topic, you should consider your purpose in writing the composition. Suppose, for example, that you have chosen (or have been assigned) “American Burial Customs” as a general subject for a short paper. If your main purpose is to inform the reader, either “Kinds of Floral Arrangements for Coffins” or “Some Burial Customs Are Dying Out” would be appropriate. To arouse interest, you might write a story about a person who has trouble arranging for his or her own burial—perhaps by mail order.

Although you may have secondary aims, each of the primary purposes you might select corresponds to one of the four main types of writing as they are conventionally classified in rhetoric:

Type of writing--------Primary purpose
Exposition...............To inform or explain
Argumentation.........To convince or persuade
Narration.................To entertain or interest
Description..............To describe or picture

Exposition (often combined with description and/or bits of narration) is the most common type of nonfiction and the kind most frequently written by college students. “How-to” compositions, for instance, are expository. Dealing with facts and ideas, expository compositions may define identify, classify, illustrate, compare, contrast, or explain a process.

Argumentation (often blended with exposition, as well as with other types of writing) is concerned with the validity of a theory, thesis, or proposition and gives reasons why it is true or false.

Narration (generally blended with description) focuses on action: simple stories (like newspaper stories) present events in chronological order; narratives with plots involve setting, characterization, conflict.

Description (seldom written independently, but usually a part of narration, exposition, argument) presents a picture with details that convey a sensory impression. Few compositions are a single form of discourse. Most are mixtures in which one form predominates.

CENTRAL IDEA

After deciding on your purpose, you will find it helpful to set down, in a single sentence, the central or controlling idea for your paper. In fact, if in the beginning you can set down a central idea containing logically arranged main points, you will already have the main plan and perhaps eliminate the need for a formal outline.

1. Purpose: To inform by pointing out ways to appraise a used car [Exposition]
Title: How to Buy a Good Used Car
Central idea: Before selecting a used car, a wise buyer will carefully inspect the car, talk to the former owner of the car, and engage a good mechanic to examine its motor.

2. Purpose: To convince the reader of a need for change in the examination system [argument]
Title: Why Have Final Examinations?
Central idea: Final examinations should be abolished.

3. Purpose: To tell a story about a true experience [Narration]
Title: Dangerous Waters
Central idea: Looking for dolphin twenty miles out, I steered my light fishing boat into dangerous waters and spent hours battling high winds before being rescued.

4. Purpose: To describe my girlfriend and show how she manages to get her own way with others. [Exposition, description, narration]
Title: Who Can Say No to Her?
Central idea: My girlfriend gets her way because of her “endearing young charms.”

Choose one of the subjects.

1. radio
2. dress
3. endangered species
4. overpopulation-fact or fiction?

The first step in the preparation of a rough outline is the jotting down of ideas on the topic. Write strong opinions on the subject and decide to compare. Next, choose a tentative title, and then jot down ideas related to the title. Then formulates a central idea, singles out key ideas, and arrnges them in a logical order, decide on the title, and writes out the plan.

Use a formal outline of the type specified by instructor.

The types of outlines most commonly used are the sentence outline, the topic outline, and the paragraph outline.

Topic outlines and sentence outlines have the same parts and the same groupings; they differ only in the fullness of expression employed. In a paragraph outline no effort is made to classify the material into major headings and subheadings; the controlling idea (stated or implied) of each paragraph is simply listed in the order in which it is to come. Paragraph outlines are especially helpful in writing short papers. Topic or sentence outlines may be adapted to papers of any length.


TOPIC OUTLINE

A New Silent Generation

Central idea:Today's generation is as silent as the 1950s    generation but does not have its illusions.
Introduction: The silence on American campuses is    disturbing.

I. The silent generation of the 1950s
   A. Opportunistic acceptance of world
   B: Confidence in self and country
II. The silent generation of today
   A: Disillusioning experiences
   B: Economic uncertainty
   C: Political attitude

Conclusion: This retreat to the 1950s has left an enormous    gap in American life.


SENTENCE OUTLINE

A New Silent Generation

Central idea: Today's generation is as silent as the 1950s    generation but does not have its illusions.
Introduction: The silence on American campuses is    disturbing.

I. The college generation of the 1950s wa silent.
   A. Students opportunistically accepted their world.
   B. They felt secure as students and as Americans.
II. Today's generation is silent.
   A. Students have lived through disillusioning times.
   B. They face great economic uncertainties.
   C: They have become disgusted with politics.

Conclusion: This retreat to the 1950s has left an enormous    gap in American life.


PARAGRAPH OUTLINE

1. A disturbing silence has fallen over American campuses.
2. Are we back in the 1950?
3. The 1950s college generation accepted the world they    lived in.
4. Because of their memories and experiences, today's    college students have no such illusions.
5. There is great economic uncertainty.
6. Today's youth are disgusted with and have retreated    from politics.
7. This retreat has left a big gap in American life.


Topic and sentence outlines and indention for parallel structure.

Any intelligible system of notation is acceptable. The one used for both the topic outline and the sentence outline is in common use. This system, expanded to show subheadings of the second and third degrees, is as follows:

 I.   ........................[Used for major headings]

   A.  .....................[Used for subheadings of the first                                degree]
   B.  ......................[Used for subheadings of the first                                  degree]
      1.  .......................[Used for subheadings of the second                                  degree]
      2.  .......................[Used for subheadings of the second                                   degree]
         a.  .....................................[Used for subheadings of                                  the third degree]
         b.   ................................[Used for subheadings of                                    the third degree]

II.  .......................

Seldom, however, will a short outline-or even a longer one-need subordination beyond the first or second degree.

Use parallel structure for parallel parts of the topic outline to clarify the coordination of parts. In topic outlines, the major headings (I, II, III, and so on) should be expressed in parallel structure, as should each group of subheadings. But it is unnecessary to strive for parallel structure between different groups of subheadings-for example, between A, B, and C under I and A, B, and C under II. (Parallel structure is not a concern in either the sentence outline or the paragraph outline.)


EFFECTIVE BEGINNNGS AND ENDINGS

Every composition needs an effective beginning and ending.

One of the best ways to begin is with a sentence that not only arouses the reader's interest but also sets forth the first main point and starts its development.

Another way to begin a composition is to write an introductory paragraph that arouses interest and states the central idea of the composition but does not start the development of the first main point.

Still another way to begin is with a question. The answer to it may set forth the main points to be discussed later. A transitional paragraph may intervene between the introduction and the discussion of the first main point.

A composition should end; it should not merely stop. Two ways to end a composition effectively are to stress the final point of the main discussion by using an emphatic last sentence and to write a strong concluding paragraph. Often a concluding paragraph clinches, restates, or stresses the importance of the central idea or thesis of the composition. An effective ending may also present a summary, a thought-provoking question, a solution to a problem, or a suggestion or challenge.

Caution: Do not devote too much space to introductions and conclusions. A short paper often has only one paragraph for a beginning or an ending; frequently one sentence for each is adequate. Remember that the bulk of your composition should be the development of the central idea, the discussion of the main headings and subheadings in your outline.

 


Planning and Writing the Whole Composition
....................................................................................



Arrange and express your ideas effectively.

A paragraph is usually a series of sentences developing one controlling idea: A paragraph developed by causal analysis must not only raise the question why but answer it to the satisfaction. The cause or causes must satisfactorily explain the result.

Many good paragraphs are developed not by any one specific method but by a combination of methods. Some good paragraphs almost defy analysis. The important consideration is not the specific method used but the adequacy of the development.

A whole composition is usually a series of paragraphs developing several closely related facets of one controlling, or central, idea.

Notice that every paragraph sticks to the subject and refers to the title. Give special attention to the close relationship between the beginning and the ending of the composition.

A unified composition, whether only one paragraph or a series of paragraphs, does not fall into order by chance. Order is the result of careful planning.

Choose an appropriate subject and limit it properly.

A subject is properly limited if you can treat it adequately (according to your purpose) in the time and space at your disposal.
Here are two examples of ways that a subject may be limited:

speed skating =>contests on ice => the winter games => the Olympics => Sports

cyclamate-sweetened peaches => cyclamates => additives => food preparation =>Domestic arts

Deciding on the degree of limitation is a matter of the writer’s judgment.

PURPOSE

Before making a final decision regarding the specific topic, you should consider your purpose in writing the composition. Suppose, for example, that you have chosen (or have been assigned) “American Burial Customs” as a general subject for a short paper. If your main purpose is to inform the reader, either “Kinds of Floral Arrangements for Coffins” or “Some Burial Customs Are Dying Out” would be appropriate. To arouse interest, you might write a story about a person who has trouble arranging for his or her own burial—perhaps by mail order.

Although you may have secondary aims, each of the primary purposes you might select corresponds to one of the four main types of writing as they are conventionally classified in rhetoric:

Type of writing--------Primary purpose
Exposition...............To inform or explain
Argumentation.........To convince or persuade
Narration.................To entertain or interest
Description..............To describe or picture

Exposition (often combined with description and/or bits of narration) is the most common type of nonfiction and the kind most frequently written by college students. “How-to” compositions, for instance, are expository. Dealing with facts and ideas, expository compositions may define identify, classify, illustrate, compare, contrast, or explain a process.

Argumentation (often blended with exposition, as well as with other types of writing) is concerned with the validity of a theory, thesis, or proposition and gives reasons why it is true or false.

Narration (generally blended with description) focuses on action: simple stories (like newspaper stories) present events in chronological order; narratives with plots involve setting, characterization, conflict.

Description (seldom written independently, but usually a part of narration, exposition, argument) presents a picture with details that convey a sensory impression. Few compositions are a single form of discourse. Most are mixtures in which one form predominates.

CENTRAL IDEA

After deciding on your purpose, you will find it helpful to set down, in a single sentence, the central or controlling idea for your paper. In fact, if in the beginning you can set down a central idea containing logically arranged main points, you will already have the main plan and perhaps eliminate the need for a formal outline.

1. Purpose: To inform by pointing out ways to appraise a used car [Exposition]
Title: How to Buy a Good Used Car
Central idea: Before selecting a used car, a wise buyer will carefully inspect the car, talk to the former owner of the car, and engage a good mechanic to examine its motor.

2. Purpose: To convince the reader of a need for change in the examination system [argument]
Title: Why Have Final Examinations?
Central idea: Final examinations should be abolished.

3. Purpose: To tell a story about a true experience [Narration]
Title: Dangerous Waters
Central idea: Looking for dolphin twenty miles out, I steered my light fishing boat into dangerous waters and spent hours battling high winds before being rescued.

4. Purpose: To describe my girlfriend and show how she manages to get her own way with others. [Exposition, description, narration]
Title: Who Can Say No to Her?
Central idea: My girlfriend gets her way because of her “endearing young charms.”

Choose one of the subjects.

1. radio
2. dress
3. endangered species
4. overpopulation-fact or fiction?

The first step in the preparation of a rough outline is the jotting down of ideas on the topic. Write strong opinions on the subject and decide to compare. Next, choose a tentative title, and then jot down ideas related to the title. Then formulates a central idea, singles out key ideas, and arrnges them in a logical order, decide on the title, and writes out the plan.

Use a formal outline of the type specified by instructor.

The types of outlines most commonly used are the sentence outline, the topic outline, and the paragraph outline.

Topic outlines and sentence outlines have the same parts and the same groupings; they differ only in the fullness of expression employed. In a paragraph outline no effort is made to classify the material into major headings and subheadings; the controlling idea (stated or implied) of each paragraph is simply listed in the order in which it is to come. Paragraph outlines are especially helpful in writing short papers. Topic or sentence outlines may be adapted to papers of any length.


TOPIC OUTLINE

A New Silent Generation

Central idea:Today's generation is as silent as the 1950s    generation but does not have its illusions.
Introduction: The silence on American campuses is    disturbing.

I. The silent generation of the 1950s
   A. Opportunistic acceptance of world
   B: Confidence in self and country
II. The silent generation of today
   A: Disillusioning experiences
   B: Economic uncertainty
   C: Political attitude

Conclusion: This retreat to the 1950s has left an enormous    gap in American life.


SENTENCE OUTLINE

A New Silent Generation

Central idea: Today's generation is as silent as the 1950s    generation but does not have its illusions.
Introduction: The silence on American campuses is    disturbing.

I. The college generation of the 1950s wa silent.
   A. Students opportunistically accepted their world.
   B. They felt secure as students and as Americans.
II. Today's generation is silent.
   A. Students have lived through disillusioning times.
   B. They face great economic uncertainties.
   C: They have become disgusted with politics.

Conclusion: This retreat to the 1950s has left an enormous    gap in American life.


PARAGRAPH OUTLINE

1. A disturbing silence has fallen over American campuses.
2. Are we back in the 1950?
3. The 1950s college generation accepted the world they    lived in.
4. Because of their memories and experiences, today's    college students have no such illusions.
5. There is great economic uncertainty.
6. Today's youth are disgusted with and have retreated    from politics.
7. This retreat has left a big gap in American life.


Topic and sentence outlines and indention for parallel structure.

Any intelligible system of notation is acceptable. The one used for both the topic outline and the sentence outline is in common use. This system, expanded to show subheadings of the second and third degrees, is as follows:

 I.   ........................[Used for major headings]

   A.  .....................[Used for subheadings of the first                                degree]
   B.  ......................[Used for subheadings of the first                                  degree]
      1.  .......................[Used for subheadings of the second                                  degree]
      2.  .......................[Used for subheadings of the second                                   degree]
         a.  .....................................[Used for subheadings of                                  the third degree]
         b.   ................................[Used for subheadings of                                    the third degree]

II.  .......................

Seldom, however, will a short outline-or even a longer one-need subordination beyond the first or second degree.

Use parallel structure for parallel parts of the topic outline to clarify the coordination of parts. In topic outlines, the major headings (I, II, III, and so on) should be expressed in parallel structure, as should each group of subheadings. But it is unnecessary to strive for parallel structure between different groups of subheadings-for example, between A, B, and C under I and A, B, and C under II. (Parallel structure is not a concern in either the sentence outline or the paragraph outline.)


EFFECTIVE BEGINNNGS AND ENDINGS

Every composition needs an effective beginning and ending.

One of the best ways to begin is with a sentence that not only arouses the reader's interest but also sets forth the first main point and starts its development.

Another way to begin a composition is to write an introductory paragraph that arouses interest and states the central idea of the composition but does not start the development of the first main point.

Still another way to begin is with a question. The answer to it may set forth the main points to be discussed later. A transitional paragraph may intervene between the introduction and the discussion of the first main point.

A composition should end; it should not merely stop. Two ways to end a composition effectively are to stress the final point of the main discussion by using an emphatic last sentence and to write a strong concluding paragraph. Often a concluding paragraph clinches, restates, or stresses the importance of the central idea or thesis of the composition. An effective ending may also present a summary, a thought-provoking question, a solution to a problem, or a suggestion or challenge.

Caution: Do not devote too much space to introductions and conclusions. A short paper often has only one paragraph for a beginning or an ending; frequently one sentence for each is adequate. Remember that the bulk of your composition should be the development of the central idea, the discussion of the main headings and subheadings in your outline.

 


 





Tips for Memo Reports
• Use memo format for most short (eight or fewer papers) informal reports within an organization.

• Leave side margins of 1 to 11/4 inches.

• Sign your initials on the FROM line.

• Use an informal, conversational style.

• Include talking (descriptive) or functional side headings to organize a report into logical divisions.

• For a receptive audience, put recommendations first.

• For an unreceptive audience, put recommendations last.





 

Outlines and Headings

 






Outlines and Headings


Most writers agree that the clearest way to show the organization of a report topic is by recording its divisions in an outline. Although the outline is not part of the final report, it is a valuable tool of the writer. It reveals at a glance the overall organization of the report. Outlining involves dividing a topic into major sections and supporting those with details.

Rarely is a real outline so perfectly balanced; some sections are usually longer than other. Remember, though, not to put a single topic under a major component. If you have only one subpoint, integrate it with the main item above it or reorganize. Use details, Illustrations, and evidence to support subpoints.

The main points used to outline a report often become the main headings of the written report. Formatting those headings depends on what level they represent. Major headings are centered and typed in bold font. Second-level heađings start at the left margin, and third-level headings are indented and become part of a paragraph.



 

 

****

 







Topic and Sentence Outlines
and
Indention for Parallel Structure.


Use parallel structure for parallel parts of the topic outline to clarify the coordination of parts. In topic outlines, the major headings (I, II, III, and so on) should be expressed in parallel structure, as should each group of subheadings. Any intelligible system of notation is acceptable. The one used for both the topic outline and the sentence outline is in common use. This system, expanded to show subheadings of the second and third degrees, is as follows:

 I.   .......................[Used for major headings]

   A.  .....................[Used for subheadings of the                              first degree]
   B.  .....................[Used for subheadings of the                              first degree]
      1.  ..................[Used for subheadings of the                              second degree]
      2.  ..................[Used for subheadings of the                              second degree]
         a.  ...............[Used for subheadings of the                              third degree]
         b.  ...............[Used for subheadings of the                              third degree]
II.  .......................


 

 






Outlines and Parallel Structure


I.    ............................................................

       A.    ............................................................

       B.    ............................................................

       C.    ............................................................

       D.    ............................................................


II.    ............................................................

        A.    ............................................................


III.    ............................................................

         A.    ............................................................


IV.      ............................................................

        A.    ............................................................

              1.    ............................................................

        B.    ............................................................

              1.    ............................................................

                        a.    ............................................................

                        b.    ............................................................

                        c.    ............................................................

       C.    ............................................................

              1.    ............................................................

              2.    ............................................................


V.    ............................................................

       A.    ............................................................

      B.    ............................................................

       C.    ............................................................






 

OUTLINE

 






The Rise of the New Deal Order


I. Your musical introduction

       A. Row, Row, Row With Roosevelt

       B. Roosevelt, Garner, and Me

       C. Happy Days Are Here Again

       D. F.R.'s First Inauguration Speech


II. Historical Question

       A. Was the New Deal a radical social reform program?


III. Thesis

     A. Roosevelt's haphazard program of New Deal reforms brought radically new approaches to American social reform. The expansion of the federal government, redefinitons of poverty andi its causes, as well as a social welfare system that has become a stple of all subsequent presidential administrations testify to the New Deal's seminal importance in American political and social life.


IV. The "New" Deal

       A. The Expansion of the Federal Government

              1. The 100 Days and Alphabet Soup

       B. Redefinitions of Poverty

              1. The Federal Emergency Relief Administration

                            a. Harry Hopkins, Spending To Save

                            b. Local government

                            c. A New Deal for Blacks?

       C. Social Welfare

              1. The Second New Deal

              2. The Social Security of 1935


V. Suggestions for further reading include:

       A. Michael Moore's video Roger and Me offers great insights into 1930s working-class history. Rent it at your local video store.

      B. Lizbeth Cohen, Making a New Deal: Industrial Workers in Chicago, 1919-1930

   C. Alan Brinkley, Voices of Protest: Huey Long, Father Coughlin, and the Great Depression






 

Outlines and Parallel Structure

 

 

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font style="color: rgb(51, 102, 102)

 






Square Brackets [   ]   
Origin: Development of the Language


In college dictionaries the origin of the word—also called its derivation or etymology—is shown in square brackets. For example, after expel might be this information: “[< ex- out + pellere to drive, thrust].” This means that expel is derived from (<) the Latin (L) word expellere, which is made up of ex-, meaning “out,” and the combining form peller, meaning “to drive or thrust.” Breaking up a word, when possible, into prefix (and also suffix, if any) and combining form, as in the case of expel, will often help to get at the basic meaning of a word.

The bracketed information given by a good dictionary is especially rich in meaning when considered in relation to the historical development of our language. English is one of the Indo-European (IE)2[1] language, a group of languages apparently derived from a common source. Within this group of languages, many of the more familiar words are remarkably alike. Our word mother, for example, is mater in Latin (L), meter in Greek (Gk.), and matar in ancient Persian and in the Sanskrit (Skt.) of India. Words in different languages that apparently descend from a common parent language are called cognates. The large number of cognates and the many correspondences in sound and structure in most of the languages of Europe and some languages of Asia indicate that they are derived from the common language that linguists call Indo-European, which it is believed was spoken in parts of Europe about five thousand years ago. By the opening of the Christian era the speakers of this language had spread over most of Europe and as far east as India, and the original Indo-European had developed into eight or nine language families. Of these, the chief ones that influenced English were the Hellenic (Greek) group on the eastern Mediterranean, the Italic (Latin) on the central and western Mediterranean and Germanic in northwestern Europe.

English is descended from the Germanic. Two thousand years ago the Hellenic, the Italic, and the Germanic branches of Indo-European each comprised a more or less unified language group. After the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century, the several Latin-speaking divisions developed independently into the modern Romance languages, chief of which are Italian, French, and Spanish. Long before the fall of Rome the Germanic group was breaking up into three families:  


(1) East Germanic, represented by the Goths, who were to play a large part in the history of the last century of the Roman Empire before losing themselves in its ruins;

(2) North Germanic, or Old Norse (ON), from which we have modern Danish (Dan.) and Swedish (Sw.), Norwegian (Norw.) and Icelandic (Icel.); and

(3) West Germanic, the direct ancestor of English, Dutch (Du.), and German (Ger.).  

The English language may be said to have begun about the middle of the fifth century, when the West Germanic Angles, Saxons, and Jutes began the conquest of what is now England and either absorbed or drove out the Celtic-speaking inhabitants. (Celtic—from which Scots Gaelic, Irish Gaelic, Welsh, and other languages later developed—is another member of the indo-European family.) The next six or seven hundred years are known as the Old English (OE) or Anglo-Saxon (AS) period of the English language. The fifty or sixty thousand words then in the language was chiefly Anglo-Saxon, with a small mixture of Old Norse words as a result of the Danish (Viking) conquests of England beginning in the eighth century. But the Old Norse words were so much like the Anglo-Saxon that they cannot always be distinguished.   The transitional period from Old English to Modern English—about 1100 to 1500—is known as Middle English (ME). The Norman Conquest began in 1066. The Normans, or “Northmen,” had settled in northern France during the Viking invasions and had adopted Old French (OF) in place of their native Old Norse. Then, crossing over to England by the thousands, they made French the language of the king’s court in London and of the ruling classes—both French and English—throughout the land, while the masses continued to speak English. Only toward the end of the fifteenth century did English become once more the common language of all classes. But the language that emerged at that time had lost most of its Anglo-Saxon inflections and had taken on thousands of French words (derived originally from Latin). Nonetheless, it was still basically English, not French, in its structure.

The marked and steady development of the English language (until it was partly stabilized by printing, which was introduced in London in 1476) is suggested by the following passages, two from Old English and two from Middle English.   A striking feature of Modern English (that is, English since 1500) is its immense vocabulary. As already noted, Old English used some fifty or sixty thousand words, very largely native Anglo-Saxon; Middle English used perhaps a hundred thousand words, many taken through the French from Latin and others taken directly from Latin; and unabridged dictionaries today list over four times as many. To make up this tremendous word hoard, we have borrowed most heavily from Latin, but we have drawn some words from almost every know language. English writers of the sixteenth century were especially eager to interlace their works with words from Latin authors. And, as the English pushed out to colonize and to trade in many parts of the globe, they brought home new words as well as goods. Modern science and technology have drawn heavily from the Greek. As a result of all this borrowing, English has become the richest, most cosmopolitan of all languages.

In the process of enlarging our vocabulary we have lost most of our original Anglo-Saxon words. But those that are left make up the most familiar, most useful part of our vocabulary. Practically all our simple verbs, our articles, conjunctions, prepositions, and pronouns are native Anglo-Saxon; and so are many of our familiar nouns, adjectives, and adverbs. Every speaker and writer uses these native words over and over, much more frequently than the borrowed words. Indeed, if every word is counted every time it is used, the percentage of native words runs very high—usually between 70 and 90 percent. Milton’s percentage was 81, Tennyson’s 88, Shakespeare’s about 90, and that of the King James Bible about 94. English has been enriched by its extensive borrowings without losing its individuality; it is still fundamentally the English language.
__________________
[1] /2 The parenthetical abbreviations for languages here and on the next few pages are those commonly used in bracketed derivations in dictionaries.

 

************************************************************

 

Memorandum
[mem-uh-ran-duh m]

mem·o·ran·dum
ˌmeməˈrandəm/Submit
noun
a written message, especially in business or diplomacy.
"he told them of his decision in a memorandum"

synonyms:    message, communication, note, email, letter, missive, directive; More a note or record made for future use.

"the two countries signed a memorandum of understanding on economic cooperation"

synonyms:    message, communication, note, email, letter, missive, directive; More LAW

a document recording the terms of a contract or other legal details.

 

Although e-mail is more often used, hard-copy memos are still useful for important internal messages that re quire a permanent record or formality.

 






MEMO TO: Diana E. McNabb, City Manager

FROM:        Paul Dollar, Street Department Director
DATE:          October 9, 2010

SUBJECT: Deer Run Street Problem

As you know, there has been extensive development of the housing area on the East Side, commonly known as Deer Run. The project coordinator informed me just the other day that about five new homes are started each week.
A petition has been received from residents of the area stating that builders have been ignoring city regulations relating to the banning of lugged wheels from city streets. When moving a short distance, bulldozers commonly are seen moving on the streets rather than being transported on trailers. A copy of the petition is attached.
The residents have also expressed concerns over the following service interruptions:
    1. Television cable was severed five times in one week.

    2. Telephone service was interrupted four times in two weeks due to damage to the main telephone line.

    3. City water lines were broken two times with interruption of water service for extended periods of time.

    4. Electric service is frequently interrupted.
As this may be a delicate matter, I felt that I should contact you before informing the city attorney’s office about the matter. I am hopeful that you will provide appropriate advice to me within a day or two.

ltn
Attachment





 

 





MEMO TO: Luis Torres, General Manager

FROM:        Jonathan R. Evans, Assistant Marketing Manager
DATE:         January 12, 200x

SUBJECT: An Analysis of the Scope and Effectiveness of                        Online Advertising

Here is the report analyzing the scope and effectiveness of Internet advertising that you requested on January 5, 200x.
The report predicts that the total value of the business-to-business e-commerce market will reach $1.3 trillion by 2003, up from $190 billion in 1999. New technologies aimed at increasing Internet ad interactivity and the adoption of standards for advertising response measurement and tracking will contribute to this increase. Unfortunately, as discussed in this report, the use of "rich media" and interactivity in Web advertising will create its own set of problems.
I enjoyed working on this assignment, Luis, and I learn quite a bit from my analysis of the situation. Please let me know if you have any questions about the report.
plw
Attachment







 

A letter or memo of transmittal announces the report topic and explain who authorized it. It briefly describes the project and previews the conclusions, if the reader is supportive. Such messages generally close by expressing appreciation for the assignment, suggesting follow-up actions, acknowledging the help of others, or offering to answer questions. The margins for the transmittal should be the same as tor the report, about 1 to 11/4 inches on all sides. The letter should be left-justified. A page number is optional.