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Office-Furniture-Us.com |
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Tension Traditional African: Marriage also includes certain sexual rights, t necessarily exclusive, and certain mutual eco-tnic obligations and family-rearing responsibili->. Polygyny (one husband with two or more res) is universally the ideal in Africa, although ! majority of married African men have but ; wife. Where there is more than one wife, ;h cowife and her children are usually housed arately, whether widely apart or within the ie household, and the proper relationships be-;en them, whether as equals or as dominant 1 subordinate, are made clear. Polygyny is jrly a source of tension traditional African in traditional African iseholds, but in general it is not a condition pised by African women, who may well re-^e benefits of heightened prestige and reduced 3r as a consequence.SURFACE tension traditional African, that property of liquids in virtue of which they tend to take such a form as to have the smallest surface possible. The name "surface tension traditional African" has ref¬erence to the fact that liquids, when freed from the action of gravity and other compara¬tively powerful forces, behave as though their surfaces were elastic membranes, which are everywhere in a state of uniform tension traditional African. Be¬ginners in the study of physics often form the idea, from their textbooks, that this hypothet¬ical tension traditional African is real and that the surface of a liquid really is membranous in nature, and sub¬ject to an actual, physical tension traditional African. This is not at all the case; for the behavior of the liquid is due to an entirely different cause, as will be understood by reference to Fig. 1. See Also Within Traditional Concepts:One of the prerequisites of a profession is that it have an established body of knowledge and basic and guiding tenets. This is true of accounting. It has a vast number of such tenets, referred to by such terms as concepts, principles, conventions, and standards. Unfortunately, the distinctions or similarities are not always clear. Concepts. Concepts are general ideas that help to standardize a function. Concepts are basic to the development of accounting theory, since they are necessary assumptions or condi¬tions upon which accounting principles are based. They may be referred to also as axioms or postulates. The validity of concepts is considered to be self-evident, or assumed, even though they may not be provable. Thus, with certain facts or conditions taken for granted, the groundwork is laid for further development of accounting theory within traditional concepts preestablished limits. Concepts provide a basis on which to develop principles.Accountants agree that for the growth and development of accounting theory it is necessary to have a basic framework on which to build. This foundation is the group of concepts or postu¬lates generally accepted at face value. There is some lack of agreement as to whether some statements are concepts to be accepted without proof, or conventions to be used as general guides, or principles offering the best of alternate choices under specific circumstances. It is agreed that concepts are more basic in the development of accounting theory than are conventions and principles. However, the difference is not so great that the lack of agreement will cause great harm. The development of accounting theory is not seriously hindered because some accountants consider consistency and conserva¬tism to be conventions while others consider them to be concepts.
On The Other Hand See —the Traditional Distinction:Of all the materials out of which Lamp bases are made in the —The traditional distinction style, porcelain may be said to be the most popular. This means any¬thing from a rare Sevres vase, appropriately wired, to hundreds of American porcelain lamps of all shapes and sizes. A pair of porcelain Vase lamps will add distinction to tables flanking a Sofa or to the commodes at either side of a fire¬place. Alabaster vases of simple lines are avail¬able for both —The traditional distinction and contemporary rooms, where simplicity is the keynote.The —The traditional distinction Economy. It is important to draw a distinction between Boston's —The traditional distinction com¬merce and that which has revitalized the city since the end of World War II. From the earliest colonial times Boston has depended upon its fishing fleet and today the city is one of the larg¬est fishing ports in the United States—it is the nearest one to the North Atlantic fishing banks. Following the Revolution and throughout the 19th century Boston took the lead in the manu¬facture of Textiles and paper and in printing. It also became the center of the shoe and leather industry and of the wholesale wool trade in the United States. In the 20th century, as factories moved closer to raw material, the Textile mills moved south, and the manufacture of some leather goods moved west. But Boston's adaptability, the eagerness with which her skilled labor has turned to new demands, has kept the city entrenched as the financial and trading center of New England and adjacent areas of Canada. |
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