Friday, March 25, 2016

Advantages of Studying in India

Study in India

India is fast becoming a major economic power in the world today. And if its growth trend continues for some more years, it would soon be playing a major role in the world economy along with China. This itself has been a major cause of attraction for many international students. Moreover, India's successful stint with democracy (except the years between 1975-1977) has also been a major magnetic force for scholars around the world. However, apart from knowing India well, there are some other advantages that are attracting students to study in India. Some of these are -
  • : Low Cost: The cost of education in India is quite low as compared to many other countries of the world.
  • Quality Education Quality of education is not uniform throughout the length and breath of the country. However, there are some educational institutes in India that provide world class education.
  • Financial Assistance: Various scholarships, education loans and other financial aids are now available for studying in India today.
  • Consultation Service: The governement of India provides consultation service to the interested international students through Education Consultants of India (Ed.CIL). Thus one can get all the information about the Indian education system, cost of education, duration, visa, accommodation facilities even before landing up in India.
  • Unique Courses: Apart from above mentioned advantages, one can also study some unique courses that were discovered and developed by the traditional knowledge system of India. Ayurveda, Sankrit, Yoga, Hindi are some such courses that enthuse many international sudents. 
The engineering and technology professions: in India today are concentrated many large companies, large-scale projects in the field of information technology, so engineers, computer scientists, programmers demand is incredible. Universities are working, as they say, under the order. Techies are cooked very high quality – the graduates of technical specialties almost wholesale repurchased largest U.S. companies.so, make your first step in INDIA. 
 

Friday, March 18, 2016

How to read others thoughts by their gestures

                                               BODY LANGUAGE

Regardless of culture, words and movements occur together with such
predictability that Birdwhistell says that a well-trained person should be able to tell
what movement a man is making by listening to his voice. In like manner, Birdwhistell
learned how to tell what language a person was speaking, simply by watching his
gestures.

Many people find difficulty in accepting that humans are still biologically animals.
Homo sapiens is a species of primate, a hairless ape that has learned to walk on two
limbs and has a clever, advanced brain. Like any other species, we are dominated by
biological rules that control our actions, reactions, body language and gestures. The
fascinating thing is that the human animal is rarely aware of his postures, movements
and gestures that can tell one story while his voice may be telling another.

Friday, March 11, 2016

whats the difference between love & infactuation?

  1.              LOVE VERSUS LUST




  • Love is complete acceptance,When we allow someone to be exactly as they are, without any belief that they aren’t good enough, without any belief that they would be “better” if they were different, this is love.Love is completely unconditional, Love has no conditions. When we truly love someone, we can’t stop loving them, regardless of what they do or say. If our love is dependent upon the other person acting and speaking how we want, then this love is completely conditional. We often confuse this to be love, but this is just positive thoughts about someone. This is just loving what a person says or does, not lovingthem.
  •  Positive thoughts or the thought “I love you” isn’t necessary to love. Sometimes it even gets in the way.Love is selfless: True love doesn’t want anything in return, because there is nothing it needs. We just love for the sake of love. When we love someone, we don’t look for them to fill our needs, love us back, and all those types of things. If that is what we are looking for, then we are just using the other person.  Love is completely selfless.



  • Lust is a product of physical attraction. It corresponds to sex and outer appearance. True love encompasses the whole of a person. Even when your partner gains weight, goes gray or becomes poor as a pauper, your love doesn't dry up. Love often deepens with time, rather than dissipates.


  • Infatuation is a nonsensical and typically short-term emotional high that causes a person to obsess about someone else. Left unchecked, it can lead to the unhealthy -- and even criminal -- act of stalking. Emotional surges are great but they are just that -- peaks that aren't sustainable and are, at their worst, one-sided. True love is mutual and lasting. Both sides of the relationship should be equally love-struck for it to blossom.





  • Scientists believe that love is embedded in the mind rather than the heart. Love activates the release ofdopamine, a neurotransmitter in the brain that makes you feel elated. According to neuroscientist Thomas Insel at Emory University, monogamous love triggers the same brain circuits as drug addictions to cocaine and heroin 
  • In fact, we're genetically inclined to choose a lover based on that ever-important first kiss. It's called themajor histocompatibility complex (MHC), and it's a sequence of genes tied to our immune systems. Men release MHC in their saliva, and women choose men with a different MHC makeup than their own because less genetic overlap produces healthier children [source: Minnesota Public Radio]. So being stuck with Cupid's arrow may be as much scientific as it is mythological.
  • Even the coldest of souls fall in love. Once bitten, whether it's a product of compatible MHC or the release of dopamine, the side effects are undeniable.

Friday, March 4, 2016

Learning German is easy for an English Speaker?

                      GERMAN LANGUAGE
                                 

German (Deutsch) is a member of the western group of the Germanic languages. It is spoken primarily  in Germany, Austria, the major part of Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, the Südtirol (South Tyrol) region of Italy, the Opole Voivodship of Poland, parts of Belgium, parts of Romania, the Alsace (Elsass) region of France and parts of Denmark. Additionally, several former colonial possessions of  these countries, such as Namibia in Africa, have sizable German-speaking populations. There are German-speaking minorities in several eastern European countries including Russia, and in the United States as well as countries in South America like Argentina. Over 120 million people speak German as their native language. German is the third most popular foreign language taught worldwide, and the second most popular in Europe. Continue reading about the German language.



  • If you are an English speaker unfamiliar with German, you may be surprised to learn that English and
  • German are closely related languages and share many words that are very similar. This is particularly true for everyday words in English that are Anglo-Saxon (that is, Germanic) in origin.
  • Of course, even words whose spelling is no different in English and German may be pronouncedquite differently.
  •  But in reading German, you will see the connections between these languages, even inmany of the "small" words.
  • Note also the general similarity of sentence structure with English. The only real difference in the German is that the verb is moved forward in the sentence.
  •  However, there are many German sentences in which a verb form is the last word in the sentence.

Unfortunately, while German is perhaps the easiest "foreign" language for an English speaker to learn, meanings of words that are spelled similarly are not always identical. These  can be confusing for the beginner. Further, German is a more structured language than English, with more complex grammar, and it will become apparent as you learn German that you will also learn more about English language structure than you might ever recall from your high school English classes. For a quick listing of similarities and differences between English and German.