Professional Documents
Culture Documents
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Read each statement and write in the letter corresponding to the external environmental factor it refers to.
a. customers
b. competition
c. suppliers
d. labor force
e. shareholders
f. society
g. technology
h. the economy
i. governments
1. The CEO was fired by the owners because our company is not profitable.
E. Shareholders. They own the company and appoint top managers.
2. GE wanted to acquire our company, but the SEC said that would be in violation of antitrust laws, thereby
preventing the deal.
H. Governments. The government can stop mergers and acquisitions when it believes society will be harmed by the
business transaction.
3. Karen bought a new oven that will cook our pizza in half the time and make it taste even better.
G. Technology. A new improved faster oven is a technology change.
4. eHarmony online dating service is losing some customers to other services focusing on Christian, African-
American, and older people seeking matches.
B. E-Harmony has more competition now.
5. Our purchasing agent just closed a deal that will let us buy sugar for a few cents less per pound, saving us
thousands of dollars per year.
I. Suppliers. The company purchases sugar from a supplier.
a. single result
b. specific
c. measurable
d. target date
a. cost leadership
b. differentiation
c. focus or niche
a. strategy
b. structure
c. culture
16. “At Victoria’s Secret, we focus on selling clothes and other products to women.”
A. Strategy. This is a focus strategy targeting women.
19. “Walking around the office at Bank of America, I realized that I would have to wear a jacket and tie every day.”
Fundamentals of Human Resource Management Functions Applications Skill Development 1st Editi
20. “I work in the production department at Ford, and she works in the marketing department.”
B. Structure. Departments are part of the structure.
Language: English
THE
Narrative
OF
A JOURNEY,
UNDERTAKEN
INCIDENTS
THAT OCCURRED TO THE AUTHOR, WHO HAS LONG SUFFERED UNDER A
FOURTH EDITION.
LONDON:
PUBLISHED BY G. B. WHITTAKER, AVE MARIA LANE.
1825.
THE
Dedication.
TO
PRINCESS AUGUSTA.
Madam,
The kind manner in which this honour has been conferred, cannot
fail to increase the value of the boon, and strengthen the ties of
gratitude by which I felt bound to your Royal Highness, for the
flattering notice, and important favours, you had previously been
pleased to bestow upon me.
Madam,
Your Royal Highness’s
JAMES HOLMAN.
PREFACE.
The very peculiar circumstances under which the Author professes
to obtrude the present volume upon public notice, appear to require
some explanation, were it only to obviate suspicions which might
arise, that the general detail of circumstances which it comprises,
has been the production of an active imagination, rather than a
relation of the occurrences of real life; for he is fully aware, that such
a construction might be put upon the apparent anomaly of the travels
of one, whose loss of sight, a source of information naturally
considered indispensable in such an undertaking, must greatly limit
his power of acquiring the legitimate materials, necessary to give his
work body and consistency.
In the year 1819, his health having for some time suffered from
causes which it is unnecessary to mention, the Author became
assured that nothing would tend more to re-establish it, than a visit to
the highly favoured clime of the southern parts of Europe: while at
the same time, and which was, perhaps, paramount to all other
considerations, he would be gratifying his desire of obtaining
information; he therefore, with this double view, determined to
undertake the journey which forms the subject of the present pages;
—and is happy to say, that in neither of these objects has he met
with disappointment.
CHAP. I.
DEPARTURE FROM ENGLAND, AND JOURNEY
TO PARIS.
In the morning I arose early, and inhaled the fresh breeze upon the
pier, a wooden structure, which extends itself for a considerable
distance into the sea. At the extremity near the town, is a pillar,
erected by the loyal people of Calais, in commemoration of the
landing of Louis xviii. immediately after the first subjection of
Napoleon, and near to it a brass plate, with the figure of a foot cast in
it, fixed upon the very spot where this monarch first trod the French
ground, after so long an absence from his affectionate subjects.
The usual hour for the departure of the diligence was ten o’clock;
but we anticipated this time, and set out at half-past nine, in
consequence of its being a fête day, when the gates of the town are
closed from ten till noon, during the performance of high mass.
On the morning after my entrance into this family, I rang the bell of
my bed-chamber, and requested a French servant to bring me hot
water; in answer to this he replied, “toute a l’heure,” with the
meaning of which I was at the time totally ignorant: after waiting a
quarter of an hour, I rang again, and received the same reply, “toute
a l’heure,” but with no better result: I again repeated my application,
it was still “toute a l’heure:” at length, after, the lapse of an hour, he
brought the water. At breakfast, I took the opportunity of inquiring the
signification of this convenient expression, requesting to be
informed, whether it implied any specific time, when they told me it
meant “immediately.” I thought, however, in the present instance,
that the action did not suit the word.
LE PORTRAIT DE PARIS.