Hãy nhập câu hỏi của bạn vào đây, nếu là tài khoản VIP, bạn sẽ được ưu tiên trả lời.
There are a woman, a man, and a child
They are in the kitchen
They are cutting a piece of meat
1. Manh used a long blue pale blue to measure the height of the dog.
2 . Scales are used to measure the weight of a person, animal or whatever.
3 . Swordfish is the fastest swimming fish. Divers can not chase them at the bottom of the ocean.
4 . Ngoc has 3 oranges. Ngoc for Duy 1 fruit. Theft of Ngoc 1 fruit. Ask the Jade more fruit?
5 . Do you know when eggs are boiled eggs can not enter the egg?
Câu này thiếu đề, ko ai trả lời dc cả.
Ghi đề đầy đủ, nếu là câu hỏi của đoạn Văn thì ghi cả đoạn ra
tại sao không có ai có cách để làm quen với anh ấy
mình nghĩ vậy
Parents are the ones who always love and protect us. Parents love us unconditional. They just hope we are happy. Just because the pieces of the coat of the child that many parents have to. When we are sick, our parents are always the ones who care for us. Therefore, we must know the importance of that feeling. When it is not late, who is not filial to parents, then love. loving and obedient to her father when possible.
Bài này mình viết tiếng việt nhưng dịch ra tiếng anh nha bạn
con Hà Thị Ngọc Giang ngu vãi có mỗi cái đấy thôi cx dell làm đc m ko có tình cảm vs cha mẹ
Đây mới được gọi là ngắn thật sự
By 2030, robots will be able to play tennis. It will be able to play very well. Robots will be look after children or old people. It will be able to feed babies or pets. It will be able to feed careful. Robots will be able to talk with people but It can talk with people now. Robots won't be able to find and repair problems in our bodies. And robots won't be able to understand what web think. By 2030, I think that robots will be useful.
Tick giùm mình với nhé bạn
Getting policies right for issues like self-driving cars and unmanned aerial vehicles is tough, but doable. Latin America isn’t significantly behind the regulatory curve. Even in the U.S., only a few states have passed rules regulating self-driving vehicles, and the Federal Aviation Administration is just this year getting around to publishing regulations on civilian drone use. Once the region’s policymakers realize that these safety issues are less than a decade away (if not already here today), they will, hopefully, begin to act.
However, addressing the impact of robotics on the economy and the labor market is much more difficult. How does the region prepare for a technology revolution that will upend millions of jobs and dozens of industries vital to regional economies? How can Latin American countries prevent the inevitable wave of economic disruption from escalating into a crisis of political stability?
There is nothing Latin American governments can or should do to slow technology’s progress in their countries.
Instead, they need to find ways to embrace the positive aspects of robotics. Even if the above sections appear a bit pessimistic, the potential of self-driving cars to reshape urban transportation, of unmanned drones to remake the logistics industry, and of robotics in general to make industries more productive and to push the boundaries of what is technologically possible could provide great benefits to Latin America and the rest of the world.
Some of the policies needed to address advances in robotics are obvious. Nearly everyone agrees on the importance of building educated, innovative and adaptive workforces. However, the reality of building those workforces requires Latin American governments to make politically difficult choices. These include raising taxes to pay for investments in education from pre-kindergarten to post-graduate levels that will enable the next generation to succeed.
Additionally, while government investment in research and development is essential, innovation is really going to come from the bottom up. Policymakers need to streamline the process of building businesses and—perhaps more importantly—of creating cultural and legal frameworks in which innovative, technology-driven businesses can fail productively. Innovation requires entrepreneurs to take risks, but they are less likely to do so when harsh bankruptcy laws and a culture that punishes unsuccessful risk-takers in the business environment hold those entrepreneurs back.
On education, small-business creation, social safety nets, and regulations, the policy choices made in the next 10 years are going to determine whether Latin America embraces the benefits of robotics or faces a new lost decade, as it did in the 1980s. The economic transition to a greater use of automation and artificial intelligence is going to disrupt economies and create social tension, but some of the difficulties can be mitigated and some opportunities can be grasped if the region begins acting early.
The most important step is to get more of Latin America’s politicians, think tanks and civil society to discuss and debate the coming technology revolution. Unfortunately, many of the hemisphere’s political leaders spend more time discussing Cold-war era disputes than technology issues affecting the vast majority of Latin America today and into the coming decade.
The region’s politicians aren’t going to spend time discussing robotics until they feel pressure from voters and civil society.
3 . That film is more boring than this one .
4 . Your kitchen is bigger than my .
5 . My grandmother is the oldest person in my family .
6 . Tam is the tallest in my class .
7 . My mother can cook better than me .
8 . Jack can play tennis better than he .
9 . You spent less money than me .
10 . This book is cheaper than it .
I love and idolize Michael Jackson because he's a great person, a humanitarian. He's a person that I inspire not only myself but others to be as well. If there were more people Michael Jackson, I promise you this world would be such a great place to live in.
Michael has inspired me in every aspect of my life, but overall he made me a better and more aware person; he taught me that it's okay to be yourself in a world that's trying to make you everyone else. Stand out, or lose yourself. Michael was always there for me when I had no one. It's funny because although I've never met Michael, but he's been here for me than the people whom I see every single day. How sad is that? There's no words in the English language that can describe how I feel about this man and how I continue to feel about him actually.
I love him from the depths of my soul. There's no way I could ever repay him for all that he's done to my existence. I owe my entire life to him. I wish he knew how much loved and cared about he really was. I also wish I could thank him as well. His presence on this Earth was a gift. I, well we(his fans) were blessed with his presence on Earth.
We're all so very grateful of that. When I listen to him music, I am in the best mood I could ever possibly be in. His music relaxes and calms my soul greatly. He was right. His spirit will live forever in his music and it has. Anyways! I instantly become a million times happier when i see him smile or hear his adorable laughter.
It honestly hurts me when I noe he's sad. His emotions are intertwined with mine. It's weird. I spend my times defending him, crying over him, and most of all, standing by him despite the fact that he's no longer here. I cry because my idol is gone forever. He's never coming back. I will keep my love for him until the day I die.
c -> are made of (chỗ này thấy thiếu thiếu of :)) )
B -> lost
c -> will win
b -> plant
d -> was