Structuring Written English Texts: Articles, Reports, and Essays

Writing Structure Frameworks

Article Structure

1. Title: Rhetorical Question

Use rhetorical questions (e.g., “Have you ever wondered…?”, “Did you know that…?”).

2. Introduction

Provide general information and use rhetorical questions.

3. Body

Use transition phrases such as: “One thing to consider is…”, “Another point is…”, “Regarding…” (or Respecto a).

4. Conclusion

Summarize and offer an opinion using phrases like: “If I were you, I would…”, “It would be a good idea to…”

Review Structure

1.

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IT Infrastructure Auditing: Compliance, Controls, and Risk Mitigation

Key Concepts in IT Auditing (Short Answers)

1. Difference between Internal and Regulatory Audits

Internal audits are conducted by an organization’s own staff or consultants to evaluate the effectiveness of internal controls, risk management, and operational processes, guiding improvements for management. Regulatory (or statutory) audits are performed by external professionals and required by law, focusing on confirming compliance with regulations and standards, usually reporting findings to shareholders

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Theories of Meaning: From Formal Logic to Cognitive Models

Chapter 1: What Is Semantics?

1.1 Definition and Scope

Semantics: The study of meaning as encoded in language. It is concerned with semantic knowledge – what speakers know about word and sentence meaning.

Linguistic Components:

  • Phonology: The sound system of a language.
  • Syntax: Sentence structure.
  • Semantics: Meaning.

1.2 Semantics vs. Semiotics

Semiotics: The general study of signs (developed by Charles Sanders Peirce).

  • Icon: A sign that resembles its object (e.g., a portrait).
  • Index: A sign with a causal
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Key Philosophical Systems: Empiricism and Rationalism

Core Principles of Empiricism

Empiricism is the denial of any innate knowledge. Each of our ideas, however abstract it may seem, must have an empirical basis and result from the action of the subject over the world. Understanding is like a tabula rasa (a blank slate) in which nothing is written before contact with experience. Understanding cannot spontaneously occur from any idea.

  • We cannot go beyond the data provided to us by way of what is called a vacuous metaphysics of speculative construction
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Essential English Grammar Rules and Writing Techniques

English Verb Tenses

Present Simple

  • General truths: The Earth orbits the Sun.
  • Habits: They always ask silly questions.
  • Instructions: First, cut the carrot into pieces.
  • Timetables: The train leaves at 17:30.
  • Storytelling: So… it’s 3 PM, I enter the pub and see him.
  • Permanent facts: I am 29. Winnipeg is in Canada.

Present Continuous

Form: am/is/are + -ing

  • Actions happening now: She is studying right now.
  • Future arrangements: I am meeting the clients at 5.
  • Temporary situations: I am living in Madrid.
  • Trends:
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Criminal Sentences: Structure, Consistency, and Res Judicata

Criminal Sentences: Definition and Function

Sentences always end the process. The Law of Criminal Procedure (LECrim) states that sentences are the resolutions that conclude the process and explicitly incorporate the Law.

Judgments are typically issued only in specific cases:

  • To resolve an appeal.
  • To resolve an appeal (repetition noted in original text).

In all other instances, the court issues orders.

Types of Criminal Sentences

Criminal sentences can have two statements:

  1. Acquittals: These sentences are
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Strategic Marketing Fundamentals and Business Growth

Branding: Concept and Significance

Meaning and Concept

Branding is the process of creating a unique name, symbol, design, or identity for a product or company that distinguishes it from competitors and builds a lasting image in the minds of consumers.

Importance and Significance

  • Product Identification: Helps consumers easily identify and differentiate a product from similar offerings in the market.
  • Customer Loyalty: Strong brands encourage repeat purchases and develop customer loyalty.
  • Premium Pricing:
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Evolution, Speciation and Ecology: Questions & Answers

Evolution, Speciation and Ecology Q&A

Fixism and diversity of living things (4 marks)

Question: How does Fixism explain the diversity of living things?

Answer: Fixism claims that species were created as they are now and that they do not change. Therefore, the diversity we find today is the diversity that has always existed.

Convergent evolution: similar wings in birds & butterflies (4 marks)

Question: Explain why two very different species, such as birds and butterflies, can have similar wings

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Historical Vocabulary: Segregation, Sharecropping, and Migration Terms

Vocabulary: Historical & Social Terms

Chipping

Definition: cutting, striking, or flaking off a small, usually thin and flat piece (as of wood or stone).

Synonyms / Translations: flake off, flake out / desprenderse, romper / déchiquetage, ébréchure, écaillage, s’effriter.

Example: The paint was constantly peeling from the thin walls.

Disrepair

Definition: the state of being in need of repair.

Translations: désolation / deterioro, en mal estado / délabrement, en mauvais état.

Example: The fence,

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Business Law Foundations: Key Concepts and Vocabulary (Chapters 1-10)

Business Law Foundations: Chapters 1–10 Summary

Chapter 1: Legal & Constitutional Foundations

U.S. law originates from four primary sources: constitutional law (derived from federal or state constitutions), statutory law (laws passed by legislatures), administrative law (rules set by agencies like the EPA), and case law (judge-made law based on precedent). Common law relies on stare decisis to ensure consistency.

Substantive law defines rights, while procedural law enforces them. Civil law resolves

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