Skip to content
🤔prompts chat🧠
🔍
question:Used daily it simultaneously whitens while protecting the skin against further damage and darkening Add punctuation

answer:Used daily, it simultaneously whitens while protecting the skin against further damage and darkening. Step 1: Identify the main clause in the sentence. "it simultaneously whitens while protecting the skin against further damage and darkening" Step 2: Identify the introductory phrase. "Used daily" Step 3: Add a comma after the introductory phrase to separate it from the main clause. "Used daily," Step 4: Combine the introductory phrase with the main clause. "Used daily, it simultaneously whitens while protecting the skin against further damage and darkening."

question:According to the Moscow Armistice, signed by Finland and the victorious Allies, mainly the Soviet Union, the Finns were to try those who were responsible for the war and those who had committed war crimes. The Soviet Union allowed Finland to try its own war criminals, unlike other losing countries of the Second World War. The Finnish parliament had to create ex post facto laws for the trials, though in the case of war crimes the country had already signed the Hague IV Convention. In victorious Allied countries war-crime trials were exceptional, but Finland had to arrange full-scale investigations and trials, and report them for the Soviet Union. Criminal charges were filed against 1,381 Finnish POW camp staff members, resulting in 723 convictions and 658 acquittals. They were accused of 42 murders and 342 other homicides. Nine persons were sentenced to life sentences, 17 to imprisonment for 10-15 years, 57 to imprisonment for five to ten years, and 447 to imprisonment varying from one month to five years. Fines or disciplinary corrections were levied out in 124 cases. Although the criminal charges were highly politicized, some war crime charges were filed already during the Continuation War. However, most of them were not processed during wartime. Answer this question based on the article: How many of the 1381 Finnish POW camp staff members were found guilty?

answer:Out of the 1,381 Finnish POW camp staff members charged, 723 were found guilty.

question:Continuing work is being undertaken to improve the quality of the judiciary in Kosovo. Translate to French

answer:Des travaux continus sont en cours pour améliorer la qualité du système judiciaire au Kosovo. En des termes plus simples pour toi : Les gens travaillent très fort pour rendre les juges et les tribunaux du Kosovo meilleurs et plus justes.

question:Read the following article and answer the question. Article: A good joke can be the hardest thing to understand when studying a foreign language. As a recent article in The Guardian newspaper noted, "There's more to understanding a joke in a foreign language than understanding vocabulary and grammar." Being able to understand local jokes is often seen as an incredible ice-breaker for a language learner eager to form friendships with native speakers. "I always felt that humor was a ceiling that I could never break through," Hannah Ashley, a public relations account manager in London, who once studied Spanish in Madrid. Told The Guardian, "I could never speak to people on the same level as I would speak to a native English speaker. I almost came across as quite a boring person because all I could talk about was facts." In fact, most of the time, jokes are only funny for people who share a cultural background or understand humor in the same way. Chinese-American comedian Joe Wong found this out first-hand. He had achieved huge success in the US, but when he returned to China in 2008 for his first live show in Beijing, he discovered that people didn't think his. Chinese jokes were as funny as his English ones. In Australia, meanwhile many foreigners find understanding jokes about sports to be the biggest headache. "The hardest jokes are related to rugby because I know nothing about rugby," said Melody Cao, who was once a student in Australia. "When I heard jokes I didn't get, I just laughed along." In the other two major English-speaking countries, the sense of humor is also different. British comedian Simon Pegg believes that while Britons use irony-basically, saying something they don't mean to make a joke-every day, people in the US don't see the point of using it so often. "British jokes tend to be more subtle and dark, while American jokes are more obvious with their meanings, a bit like Americans themselves," he wrote in The Guardian. Question: What can we guess about Hannah Ashley? Answer: Options are: (i) She feels confident in using Spanish.. (ii) She believes that one had better rely on facts when speaking a foreign language.. (iii) She thinks that Spanish people do not have much of a sense of humor.. (iv) She feels that not being able to share their humor makes her seem boring to Spanish people..

answer:From the given article, we can infer that option (iv) is the most accurate: Hannah Ashley feels that not being able to share their humor makes her seem boring to Spanish people. She stated, "I could never speak to people on the same level as I would speak to a native English speaker. I almost came across as quite a boring person because all I could talk about was facts." This suggests that she found her inability to understand and partake in Spanish humor hindered her interactions, making her appear less interesting or "boring" to Spanish speakers. The article doesn't provide enough information to support the other options.

Released under the Colossus License.

has loaded