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Descriptive
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A descriptive essay is an essay that describes something like a person, location, thing, event, or process.  Descriptive essays can be non-fiction, but they can also be fiction.  The goal is to allow the reader to visualize whatever is being described.  Good descriptive essays evoke all of the senses, so that the reader knows how what is being described looks, sounds, smells, tastes, and feels.

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Paper Masters
Leaders and Managers the Points
The points of differentiation between leaders and managers have been debated for decades. Zaleznik (1977) argued that the main difference was that managers were focused on rationality and control, with a strong…
Paper Undergraduate
Eudoxus of Cnidus
Boyer, in his "A History of Mathematics" gives a quote from Eudoxus that is quite self-descriptive of this genius, "Willingly would I burn to death like Phaeton, were this the price for reaching the sun and learning its…
Paper Undergraduate
Hitler Youth: organization, ideology, and historical impact
The Hitler Youth or the Hitlerjugend was a group comprised of German youth and while the Hitler Youth was "not in essence a military organization" from this groups origins "as the youth department of the brown-shirted…
Paper Undergraduate
Devised; it Has to Be
The research methodology constitutes a paradigm or theory that relates how the researcher approaches his/her study, as well as how he/she undertakes the research effort. In the study, "Using the 'power of the data'…
Paper Undergraduate
Philosophy concepts and foundations
Ethical relativism with a subjectivist orientation:
Essay Doctorate
Anomie and Alienation Lost, With No Possibility
Running through the literature of classical late nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century sociology are themes of isolation, of the poverty of life lived in isolated cells, of the fragility of a life in which we can almost never make authentic connections with other people, in which we are lost even to ourselves. We have – and this "we" includes the entire population of the industrialized world, or at least most of it – have raised the act of rationalism to an art form, but along the way we have lost so much of our humanity that we can no longer form or maintain a community. Four of the major social critics of the twentieth century took up these themes for essentially the same reason: To argue that while ailing human society could be transformed in ways that would give it meaning once again. They differ significantly, however, in what the nature of that transformation should and what meaning humans should be intent on seeking.
Paper Doctorate
Network Support Technologies Case Study
Information is now growing at speeds never thought imaginable. Today's world of Information Technology (IT) has provided the dynamic platform in which exponentially growing information resources emerge.
Paper Undergraduate
Percentage of Black Males Working
Percentage of Black Males Working in Human Resources
Paper Undergraduate
Project Management Is it Really
PROJECT Management IS IT REALLY NECESSARY?
Paper Undergraduate
Characteristics of effective leaders in rapidly developing economies
The success of any type of organisation, especially the ones functioning in the area of business depends upon the quality of their management. Changes in the latest period have turned leadership into one of the key…