Some articles on accounts, account:
... to Gildas in time struggled with the gaps in his account, which they filled with either their own research, or imagination ...
... In fact, the value theory applied in national accounts is nowadays strongly influenced by the valuation principles of ordinary business accounts and the prevailing social relations ... The implicit assumption made in national accounts, is that the account at the macro-level must be similar to that at the micro-level ... The accounts can be criticised for being eclectic in some ways, but that is not necessarily a problem the aim of the exercise is to identify and categorise all flows, and the user can then reaggregate ...
... Bitbucket offers both commercial plans and free accounts ... It offers free accounts with unlimited numbers of private repositories (which can have up to five users in the case of free accounts) as of September 2010 ...
... Full-time study accounts for 19% of enrollments ... Part-time study accounts for 58% of enrollments ... Open learning accounts for 23% of enrollments ...
... Culture and Society", William Henry Scott identifies the three accounts directly detailing the events of Lakandula’s lifetime An account written by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi himself ... Scott also identifies other accounts that don’t directly refer to that occasion, but provide additional information about conditions at the time ... These include two accounts of the Magellan voyage, reports from the attacks on Borneo in 1578-79, letters to the king from royal auditor Melchor de Avalos, Reports by later Governors General, passing details in sworn ...
Famous quotes containing the word accounts:
“But, on more accounts than one, I had had enough of moose-hunting. I had not come to the woods for this purpose, nor had I foreseen it, though I had been willing to learn how the Indian manvred; but one moose killed was as good, if not as bad, as a dozen.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity! I say, let your affairs be as two or three, and not a hundred or a thousand; instead of a million count half a dozen, and keep your accounts on your thumb-nail.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“We must love one another, yes, yes, thats all true enough, but nothing says we have to like each other. It may be the very recognition of all men as our brothers that accounts for the sibling rivalry, and even enmity, we have toward so many of them.”
—Peter De Vries (b. 1910)