Universal film - And Sanctify My House (ŮءŮŮŘą بŮŘŞŮ)
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Universal film - And Sanctify My House (ŮءŮŮŘą بŮŘŞŮ)

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I feel like
eating the spaghetti until i forgetti my regretti
When you have a bad suspicion about a Muslim in your heart, you should increase your consideration toward him and make dua for him. This way you will infuriate Satan and will be able to drive him away. Because of this, Satan will be reluctant to put evil thoughts into your heart, afraid that you would increase your consideration towards your brother and will make dua for him again.
Abu Hamid al-Ghazali
Originally found on: hear-the-heartbeat
(via islamic-art-and-quotes)
The love I feel for you Suddenly turns into hate I dunno maybe itâs some kind of twisted fate Cause in the prior times all I see is what I want Now Iâm seeing the things I previously canât Truly infatuation makes you blind Cause Iâll do whatever Just to keep you away from being sad Now youâve made me realize That Iâm such a stupid fool But whatever Just remember I donât give a damn anymore.
C.M. (via words-within-me)
Tears may ease the paim. Time may ersse the past. But only smile & forgiveness can make you a better person
Introductions
ä˝ ĺĽ˝ (nÇ hÇo)-Hello
ä˝ ĺŤäťäšĺĺďź(nÇ jiĂ o shĂŠnme mingzi)- What is your name?
ćĺŤâŚ (wÇ jiĂ oâŚ)- Iâm calledâŚ
ććŻâŚďźwÇ shĂŹâŚ)- IâmâŚ
ććĽäťçťä¸ä¸ (wÇ lĂĄi jièshĂ o yÄŤxiĂ )-Let me introduce you
čżćŻâŚ(zhè shĂŹâŚ)-This isâŚ
揢čż(huÄn yĂng)-Welcome
莤čŻä˝ 䝏ĺžéŤĺ ´(rènshi nÇmen hÄn gÄo xĂŹng)-Very nice to meet you
ä˝ ćŠ(nÇ zÇo)-Good morning
äťçť(jièshĂ o)-Introduce
莤čŻ(rènshi)-To get to know; to know

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8 CHINESE MANDARIN
Level 1 Vocabulary: Part 3
äşş rĂŠn: person
äşşć°ĺ¸ rĂŠn mĂn bĂŹ: yuan, âmoney of the peopleâ čŽ¤čŻ rènshi: to meet ćĽrĂŹ: sun ćĽćŹ rĂŹbÄn: Japan 厚ć rĂłng yĂŹ: easy č ròu: meat ä¸ sÄn: three ćŁćĽ sĂ nbĂš: to take a walk ĺŤĺ sÄozi: sister-in-law, the wife of a friend ĺ shÄng: trade ĺĺş shÄng chÄng: shopping centre ĺĺş shÄng diĂ n: store ĺäşş shÄng rĂŠn: trader, merchant ä¸ shĂ ng: up, to go up ä¸ç shĂ ng bÄn: to go to work ä¸ćŹĄ shĂ ng cĂŹ: on the last time ä¸čŻž shĂ ng kè: having classes ä¸ç˝ shĂ ng wÄng: surf the web ä¸ĺ shĂ ng wĹ: morning ä¸ććshĂ ng xÄŤng qÄŤ: last week ĺş shĂĄo: spoon ç shÄng: to be born çćĽ shÄng rĂŹ: birthday çćäşşshÄng yĂŹ rĂŠn: business man ĺŁčŻč shèngdĂ n jiĂŠ: Christmas ĺŁčŻčäşş shèngdĂ n lÄorĂŠn: Santa Claus 声éłshÄng yÄŤn: voice äťäšshĂŠnme: what?, how? äťäšćśĺ shĂŠnme shĂhou: when?, what time? čşŤä˝ shÄntÄ: health, body čŽžčŽĄĺ¸ shè ji shÄŤ: designer ĺ¸ shÄŤ: master čŻ shÄŤ: poem 夹ä¸äşşĺshÄŤ yè rĂŠn yuĂĄn: unemployed ĺ shĂ: ten ćŻ shĂŹ: to be ćśĺ shĂhou: time, specific moment äşĺżshĂŹr: business, matter ć shĹu: hand ććşshĹu jÄŤ: cell phone çŚ shòu: thin ĺ¸ shuĂ i: handsome, good looking (used for males) ĺčč shuÄngbÄotÄi: twins č° shuĂ, sheĂ : who? ć°´ shĹi: water çĄč§ shuĂŹ jiĂ o: to sleep 说 shuĹ: to speak 䚌 shĹŤ: book äšŚĺş shĹŤdiĂ n: bookstore ĺ sĂŹ: four é sòng: to accompany ĺ˛suĂŹ: classifier for ages ć suĹ: classifier for school, university 县č sĂšshè: bedroom, dorm ç´ éŁč sĂšshĂzhÄ: vegetarian äť tÄ: he, him 弚 tÄ: she, her äťäťŹ tÄmen: they, them 太 tĂ i: very, a lot 太äştĂ i le: to much 夊 tiÄn: day, sky 夊夊tiÄn tiÄn: everyday ĺŹtÄŤng: to listen to, to hear ä˝é tÄzhòng: weight ä˝č˛ tÄyĂš: sports ĺĺŚ tĹngxuĂŠ: class buddy, class colleague ĺäş tĹngshĂŹ: co-worker, work colleague 头ĺ tĂłufĂ : hair 头 tĂłu: head ĺ tĂš: rabbit ĺžäšŚéŚ tĂş shĹŤ guÄn: library 輿 xÄŤ: west                                                                                                Â
ä¸ xiĂ : bellow, underneath, next ä¸ç xiÄ bÄn: to finish work, leave work ä¸ćŹĄ xiĂ cĂŹ: next time ä¸čŻž xiĂ kè: to finish class ä¸ććxiĂ xÄŤngqÄŤ: next week ä¸ĺxiĂ wĹ: afternoon ä¸é¨ xiĂ yĹ: to rain ä¸ä¸ä¸Ş xiĂ yi ge: the next one, next éŚć¸Ż xiÄng gÄng: Hong Kong ćłxiÄng: to want                                                                                      Â
ĺä¸ć xiĂ ng dĹng guÄi: to turn east ç°ĺ¨ xiĂ nzĂ i: now, in this moment, currently ĺ çxiÄnsheng: sir, mister, husband (formal) ĺ°ĺ§xiÄojie: miss, young lady ĺ°ĺş xiÄo qĹŤ: neighborhood, district, block                                              Â
ĺ°čŻ´ xiÄo shuĹ: novel ĺ°ĺŚxiÄo xuĂŠ: school, elementary school 輿çç xÄŤ bÄn yĂĄ: Spain 谢谢xiè xie: thank you ĺ揢 xÄhuan: to like ĺż xÄŤn: heart ć°ĺš´ xÄŤn niĂĄn: New Year čĄ xĂng: ok, alright ĺ§ xĂŹng: last name ĺ§ĺxĂŹng mĂng: full name ĺš¸çŚ xĂŹngfĂş: hapiness ćć xÄŤngqÄŤ: week ććä¸xÄŤngqÄŤ yÄŤ: monday ććäşxÄŤngqÄŤ èr: tuesday ććä¸xÄŤngqÄŤ sÄn: wednesday ććĺxÄŤngqÄŤ sĂŹ: thursday ććäşxÄŤngqÄŤ wĹ: friday ććĺ xÄŤngqÄŤ liĂš: saturday ćć夊 / ćććĽxÄŤngqÄŤ tiÄn/ rĂ: sunday ĺ ĺźĺ ĺźĺ§ĺŚš xiĹngdĂŹ jiÄmèi: brothers and sisters ć´ xÄ: to wash ć´ćé´ xÄshĹujiÄn: bathroom äźćŻxÄŤuxi: to rest ĺ¸ć xÄŤwĂ ng: to want, to wish ĺŚxuĂŠ: to study, to learn ĺŚäš xuĂŠxi: to study, to learn ĺŚçxuĂŠsheng: student ĺŚć ĄxuĂŠxiĂ o: school ĺŚé˘xuĂŠyuĂ n: college éŞéąź xuÄ yĂş: codfish čŽçť xĂšnliĂ n: to train ĺ¤wĂ i: out of, foreign ĺ¤ĺ Ź wĂ igĹng: grandfather (motherâs side) ĺ¤ĺŠ wĂ ipĂł: grandmother (motherâs side) ĺ¤ĺ˝ wĂ iguĂł: foreign country ĺ¤ĺ˝äşş wĂ iguĂłrĂŠn: foreigner ćäź wÄnhuĂŹ: a feast ć wÄn: late ćä¸ wÄn shĂ ng: night ćéĽ wÄn fĂ n: dinner çŠć¸¸ć wĂĄn yĂłu xĂŹ: to play Â
ĺ  wèi: expression used when answering the phone    Â
 为äťäšwèi shĂŠnme: why?                     Â
ć wĂŠn: writing, culture                                                                            Â
éŽ Â wèn: to ask                                                                                         Â
ć  wĹ: I, me                                                                                             Â
ć䝏 women: We, us                      Â
äş wĹ: five                                                                                                 Â
 ĺéĽ wĹ fĂ n: lunch                                                                     Â
ĺŽ´äź Â yĂ nhuĂŹ: feast                                                                                  Â
čŚ Â yĂ o: to really want                                                                              Â
Â äš Â yÄ: also, too, as well                                                                        Â
çˇçˇ yĂŠye: grandfather (fatherâs side)                                         Â
ä¸ yÄŤ: one                                        Â
ä¸ĺŽ yĂdĂŹng: to be sure                                                                           Â
ä¸ĺ ą yĂgòng: altogether                                                                          Â
ä¸äźĺżč§yĂhuĂŹr jiĂ n: see you really soon                             Â
ä¸čľˇ yĂŹqÄ: together    Â
ä¸ä¸ĺż yÄŤxiĂ r: a little                                                                        Â
襣ć yÄŤfu: clothes                           Â
䝼ĺ yÄhòu: after                                                                      Â
䝼ĺ yÄqiĂĄn: before    Â
ĺťé˘  yÄŤyuĂ n: hospital          Â
ĺťç  yÄŤsheng: doctor            Â
čąĺ˝Â yÄŤngguĂł: Englang                                                                      Â
čąčŻ Â yÄŤngyĹ: english        Â
éśčĄ  yĂnhĂĄng: bank                                                                              Â
éłäš  yÄŤnyuè: music         Â
éłäšĺŽśÂ yÄŤnyuè jiÄ: musician                                                           Â
ćyĹu: to have   Â
 ćĺ yĹu mĂng: famous                                                                            Â
ććśĺ yĹushĂhou: sometimes   Â
ć犺yĹu kòng: to have free time Â
ććć yĹu yĂŹ sÄŤ: interesting    Â
éŽĺą yĂłu jĂş: post office           Â
éŽçŽąyĂłu xiÄng: e-mail       Â
éąź yĂş: fish                                                                                  Â
é¨yĹ: rainÂ
ĺ  yuĂĄn: round            Â
čż Â yuÄn: far    Â
čŻč¨  yĹyĂĄn: language             Â
ćżć yuĂ nyĂŹ: to agree                                                                           Â
ć yuè: moon   Â
ä¸ć yi yuè: january         Â
äşćèr yuè: february       Â
ä¸ćsÄn yuè: march  Â
 ĺćsĂŹ yuè: april                                                                                       Â
 äşćwĹ yuè: may                                                                             Â
ĺ ćliĂš yuè: june  Â
ä¸ćqÄŤ yuè: julyÂ
ĺ ŤćbÄ yuè: august           Â
äšćjiĹ yuè: september
ĺćshĂ yuè: october
ĺä¸ćshĂ yi yuè: november         Â
ĺäşćshà èr yuè: december                                                                  Â
ĺ¨ Â zĂ i: to be, stay atÂ
ĺ zĂ i: again, one more time                 Â
ĺč§ zĂ ijiĂ n: goodbye          Â
ćŠä¸ zÄo shĂ ng: dawn                  Â
ćŠéĽzÄo fĂ n: breakfast  Â
ćžzhÄo: to look for          Â
Â ç §ç zhĂ opiĂ n: photo        Â
čżćŹĄzhè cĂŹ: this time   Â
čżä¸Şzhè ge: this      Â
čżäşş zhèr: here                Â
čżäš zhème: so              Â
čżć ˇÂ zhèyĂ ng: this way, this kind, similar     Â
 ćäšć ˇÂ zÄnmeyĂ ng: how?, in what way?    Â
ćäščľ° zÄnmezĹu: how to get to?        Â
çzhÄn: really, truly                 Â
ćżĺŽ˘zhÄng kè: politician       Â
ĺŞ zhÄŤ: just, only          Â
ĺŞć zhÄŤ yĹu: the only one    Â
 çĽé zhÄŤdĂ o: to know           Â
čĺzhĂyuĂĄn: worker     Â
ä¸ĺ˝ ZhĹngguĂł: China             Â
ä¸ĺ˝äşş zhĹngguĂłrĂŠn: chinese           Â
ä¸ć zhĹng wèn: Chinese culture          Â
ä¸é´  zhĹng jiÄn: in the middle of           Â
ä¸ĺŚÂ zhĹng xuĂŠ: highschool       Â
ä¸ĺ zhĹng wĹ: noon         Â
éčŚ Â zhòng yĂ o: important       Â
ĺ¨ zhĹu: cicle, week  Â
ĺ¨ćŤzhĹu mò: weekend    Â
ä˝zhÚ : to live in  Â
çĽ zhĂš: to wish                                                                                            Â
 辰 zĹu: to walk                                                                                         Â
ć zuĂŹ: the most (comparison)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
 ćčż zuĂŹjĂŹn: recently, lately                                                                          Â
ĺ  zuò: to sit                                                                                             Â
ĺ  zuò : to do, to make                                                                            Â
ĺéĽzuò fĂ n: to cook                                                                                Â
ĺçć zuò shÄng yĂŹ: to do business                                                    Â
ä˝ĺŽś zuò jiÄ: writer
ć¨ĺ¤Š zuĂłtiÄn: yesterday Â
ä˝ä¸ zuò yè: homework           Â
ĺˇŚĺł zuĹyòu: roughly, approximately
čśł Â zĂş: feet, foot
čśłç zĂş qiu: football
END OF PART 3 This vocabulary list is the result from my Level 1 Chinese Mandarin Classes at the University. The books used are: New Practical Chinese Reader Volume 1 Textbook/ Workbook; Great Wall Chinese Essentials in Communication Volume 1 Textbook/ Workbook.
The audio for (most of) this vocabulary is available at the New Practical Chinese Reader Volume 1 Video Lessons. [Lessons 1-14 Playlist: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLB1B262B05A6992FD] [Lesson 2 not available on the playlist: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l2BEgmTa-BE]
Feeling like you have lost your connection with Allah [SWT]? How to refresh Iman?Â
This is an older article, but the advice is still valid. Iâm brushing up and challenging myself to dig for real answers regarding the direction Iâm choosing to pursue. I feel like asking these questions of myself is a good exercise in making sure my next Account Executive or Marketing role is the right fit.
The Complete Guide to Exams
The school year is coming closer to the end, and for some, this means end-of-year exams. Iâve collected as much information as I could, some from my experience with previous tests and my new school entrance exams (which were tough), and Iâve put it all into a step-by-step guide on how to battle exams and get the best out of them.
Are you ready?Â
Before you even start revising, you need to make sure youâre ready and have everything sorted out to learn and revise in a smart way.Â
1. Where should you work? If you donât have a designated study area, find one. It should be quiet, uncluttered, organised, and where you can keep all your revision resources even during the time when youâre not revising - basically everything for quality studying. The best place is a desk in your bedroom.Â
Make sure that it is also a pleasant place to study in, where you can easily turn on some music and use the Internet (for studying!). Also, make sure thereâs good lighting, preferably natural light. Your room should be warm but not stuffy, and your seat should give you good support and be at a height where you can easily rest your non-writing arm on the desk. If you have a study area, make sure it is tidy and organised, ready for you to study.Â
2. When should you work? What Iâve learnt from my hectic school entrance exams experience is that you should always make your plan and schedule very flexible and easy. Start by listing all the subjects for which you need to revise. For each of the subjects, work out exactly what you need to learn and group it into small, manageable topics.Â
School days Set aside roughly 30 minutes in the evening for one topic. This means 20 minutes active learning (revising), a five min. break and three to five minutes reviewing what you just learnt. From previous examsâ revision, I have realised that it is not a good idea to set specific times, but it is always good to know roughly how long one topic will take you to complete.Â
Weekends What time of day is best for you? Be honest and consistent, as itâs much easier to work when youâve got a routine youâre used to. A good idea is a 30-minute slot right after breakfast. If the exams are getting close, extent to two or even three slots (topics) per day, but only if you can manage it. Make sure you know the exact date for each of the exams by making an exam timetable (use this template).Â
Now that you know how much time youâll need in order to cover all the topics, you need to set up a schedule for when youâll study. Instead of making a tight schedule and plan exact times of studying for each day, you have several other better and more flexible options:Â
Using a weekly plan - Save the image for the Weekly Planner and print it. - Choose which subjects you are going to revise and when. Fill these in on your planner, but make sure not to make your schedule too tight or tiring. - Pin it up on your wall. It also helps to have a smaller version available with you in school; such as on your phone, in case you need a glance at your plan.Â
Using a topic checklist - Save the image and print this topic checklist, one per subject - Write down the topics that you need to revise for that particular subject, making sure that the first topics are the ones which are vital, the second ones are important, and the last ones for if you have time.Â
- The table is divided into sections â these are the stages of your revision. Youâll learn more about them later on in the guide. Once you have completed that stage of revision for the topic, put a tick. - Pin it up on your wall. It also helps to have a smaller version available with you in school, such as on your phone, in case you need a glance at your plan.Â
Using a subject checklist - Save the image and print this subject checklist - Fill in the subjects and list the topics for each subject - Tick every time you complete a topic for a particular subject - Pin it up on your wall. It also helps to have a smaller version available with you in school, such as on your phone, in case you need a glance at your plan.Â
3. What equipment do you need? Here is a list of suggested equipment you might want to use for top-quality revision. Youâll need the items I have listed here for the activities that I will mention later on in the guide. Remember that you donât necessarily need them all! - Coloured pens and/or highlighters - Sticky notes - Card or index cards (and a folder/box to store them in) - A3 paper and a folder to store - Notebook with sections for each subject or a separate notebook for each subject.Â
Resources It might seem obvious, but you always must make sure that you have a reliable resource from where you revise. The best resources are your notebooks, if, throughout the year, you have made notes for all the material youâve studied. As well as that, textbooks that youâve used in class are a great help as they provide all the information you need. For specific material, revision guides (I order mine online when/if I need them) are amazing, as they also have tips for tackling the topics.Â
Active learning There are many ways to keep your brain alert and learning actively, but here are the basic skills youâll need first.Â
1. Brain Warm-Up First of all, instead of blindly going through the entire topic, start off by âwarming upâ. It helps to get you going with revision and figure out whatâs missing in your knowledge.Â
What do I already know about this topic? - Spend a few minutes jotting down everything you can think of to so with the topic - Do this either in a list - âŚor in a brainstorm - have a bubble in the centre of the page and drawing lines out from the centre with words or phrases. What else do I need to know about this topic?Â
2. Plough through notes Now is the time to use your notebooks, textbooks, and any other notes about the topic (whether on the Internet or on a printout from your teacher). Pick out key words and ideas from the texts by underlining or highlighting. You might want to use different colours.Â
3. Summarise Make notes that make sense to you and that only contain the information that is needed, a.k.a. write a topic summary. Itâs helpful to use short sentences, lots of key words and phrases, formulae (if needed), diagrams (if needed), and write in bullet points. Use abbreviations if you feel like you need to. Remember - theyâre your notes, so as long as you understand them and itâs easier to remember, then go ahead!Â
Learning techniques Here are a few of different interesting learning techniques that use the three-step concept you have just learnt (1. Warm-Up, 2. Notes, 3. Summarise). Remember that some techniques work better for some subjects/topics than for other ones.Â
Mind maps
I did this all the time for my revision, and it helped a loooot. Use an A3 page with the name of the topic in the middle, then draw arrows coming from the circle, with sentences, key words, concepts, diagrams, formulae, and everything you can think of to do with the topic. Different coloured pens and highlighters always helps with this. Remember to do a âbrain warm-upâ by adding info from your own knowledge, then reading through and picking out information from your notes, then finally combining the two to create a whole idea. This revision technique is useful for subjects such as Geography and Science, where you need to remember a lot of processes. Below is an example of a mind map about health.Â
Box and bubble flow charts This is a technique where key points are connected downwards and sideways by lines, surrounded by boxes or bubbles. Start off with the warm-up as usual by brainstorming or listing everything you know about the topic, then go through the notes and pick out the key stuff. When creating a flow chart from a text, it helps to write the key point of each paragraph. Use colour to help group your notes into the flow chart. Use different shapes to group as well. Revise from your flow charts in the same way that you would from your mind maps. This learning technique is also useful for processes, but also topics and subjects relating to chronology, like History.Â
Index cards This is a method that uses a question and answer approach with numbered points, key words, colour and pictures. Start with the warm-up, and then go through the notes and underline/highlight key words. Depending on what your cards will be about, you may want to colour-code the key words. Then, use the highlighted key words to write questions on one side of the cards, then answers on the other. Remember that, since the cards should be small and compact, you should always write in notes and sometimes draw diagrams and write abbreviations instead of writing the whole thing out. This technique can be used for anything, really, but mostly for material that you need to remember, such as definitions of key words, formulae, rules, etc. Itâs great for testing yourself. Set your cards out in front of you, in order (if there is one), question side upwards. See if you can give a full answer to each question, then turn the card over to check whether you have remembered all the points.Â
Association techniques These memory tricks are very useful for remembering words, a series of words, certain facts, etc. and theyâre very useful in practically all the subjects. Your brain loves making connections between facts and letters, words, pictures, rhymes and stories. The best memory tricks are the ones you invent yourself.Â
Word and picture links
You can use all kinds of connections between the facts that you want to learn and other words with a similar sound, an amusing meaning, and more. Use cards to write the fact/word and draw the picture that will help you remember it underneath or on the other side. These can be used for remembering words such as countries and capital cities, or for vocabulary in languages. For example, to remember the word for âtrainersâ in French (âles basketsâ) I would write âles basketsâ on one side of the card, then draw a picture of a pair of trainers in a basket on the other side, because âles basketsâ sounds like âbasketâ.Â
Letter links
See if the first letter of each word you want to learn makes another word or useful pattern. For example, a memory trick used for life processes is âMrs Grenâ. Movement Respiration Senses Growth Reproduction Excretion Nutrition
Revision activities Once youâve got the basics of the topic covered, you need to put what youâve just learnt into action. Below are ideas for interesting activities that will help you test your knowledge.Â
- Watching educational videos about the topic on YouTube (yes, you can use YouTube for revision!)Â
- Condensing boring paragraphs of information about the topic into small sticky notes leaving only the key points
- Making cue cards - Note/cue cards are always handy for when youâre out and about. List definitions and rules you need to know. Or write key words from which you can fill in the gaps to tell the whole story. They're also handy for learning language vocabulary. Once filled in, these cards will allow you to reclaim time that would otherwise be wasted - on the bus, in the queue at the supermarket - thereâs no limit.
- For some cases, youâll find it much easier to understand if you have a diagram or a picture in front of you than if you have a page of text in front of you. This is where the Internet comes in handy.Â
- Making timelines -Â Timelines can be helpful - especially for History. They are invaluable for making sense of a series of events, because you can trace improvements, factors etc. Pin them up in your room or take them out with you (or save a photo on your phone) for constant reviewing.
- Getting friends and family to test you - this works well for vocabulary and key words.Â
- Recording information and then listening back to it when youâre out, for example on the bus, during school breaks, etc.Â
- Repeating things over and over in your head to remember them. Works well for names, vocabulary, or key points.Â
- Listening to songs about the topic - there are loads of educational songs on YouTube. Listen to them even if theyâre âlameâ. If the song is catchy and you listen to it frequently, it will stick in your head and youâll be able to recall the point youâll need on the exam!Â
- Talking and discussing points with someone else (who is also studying the topic) - whatâs great about this is that you can talk about it, which is much easier and engaging than just reading your textbook. And by discussing the topic, it will be easier to see what you remember and what you donât.Â
- Making a PowerPoint presentation or even an animation about the topic - works for every topic, helps you remember, and is basically the perfect way to revise and review a topic.Â
- Using educational websites such as BBC Bitesize (there are loads more). Bitesize has revision notes, activities (yay!) and quizzes for many different topics, and is a great website to use if youâre bored of using your textbook.Â
- Making flash card games with vocabulary, key words, definitions or main points. Yes, make games. Games like matching games and dominos where youâll be able to, for example, match the definition to the word or the question to the answer are great because theyâre not boring but at the same time require you to think and review the information.Â
- Writing key words, dates, points, etc. on sticky notes and placing them around the house/room. Instead of having your revision session in your study area, youâll be walking all around the house and reading the notes. Another idea is to write questions relating to the topic on the notes, and if you know the answer, collect the note. Do this until youâve collected all the notes.Â
- Working with a friend - and making resources and exercises for each other, like âfill in the blanksâ, quizzes, etc.Â
- If your exam includes writing an essay, you can make practising essay writing more fun with Written? Kitten! which shows cute pictures of kittens for every set number of words you have written.Â
Review, review, review
After youâve done each of the topics, itâs time to review. This is where your mind maps, flow charts, lists and all the other review exercises youâve done come in handy. Consider doing practice exam papers, too. The exams are near, so itâs vital that you keep reviewing everything youâve done. Carry around the flash cards you made, save revision files on your phone. Keep listening to those revision recordings youâve made (if you made them) and keep listening to those annoying songs on YouTube. Know what your hardest exam will be, and why, and focus on those areas.
 Advice about exams
1. Know what to expect
Make sure you can answer the following questions about each exam: - When is it? - How long does it last? - Where is it? - How many marks are there? - Do I get a choice in any part of it?Â
2. Understand the instructions Here is a basic list of instruction words used in exam papers (make sure you know what they mean): - analyse - assess - comment on - compare - contrast - criticise - define - describe - discuss - evaluate - explain - interpret - justify - list - relate - state - summarise
3. Know how to answer Remember that the more marks there are for the question, the more it is worth and the more you should write. Avoid careless mistakes. Always follow exactly what the question says. If it says to explain, make sure you do explain your statement and give reasons. Make sure there arenât any spelling or grammar mistakes (although some teachers donât count minor spelling mistakes).Â
Final tipsÂ
Before the exam Are you at your best? - Make sure you have everything ready - Get a good nightâs sleep - Be determined and think positively - Eat healthily - Try not to panicÂ
During the exam - Keep track of time - Divide your time sensibly for all the questions, with time at the end for checking (I always make sure I check at least three times) - The way I do the exam paper is that I go through the whole paper and only do the easiest questions. I never let myself stay on one question for more than two minutes. Once Iâve reached the end of the paper, I go back and do the ones I havenât done. If thereâs a question that Iâm not sure about, I leave it, do all the rest, and then use the time that thereâs left to try to figure out an answer. - Ask yourself - do my answers make sense? Have I spelled long words or names that appear in the exam paper correctly?Â
I hope you find this guide useful! If youâve got any questions or would like some help with anything about exam revision, remember - you can ask us anything!Â
Traveling Student
1) Why I do love travel ? đ Jawapannya I wouldn't have learned to love myself completely if I had stayed, I wouldn't be proud of myself either. I would be stuck in a routine and I love to explore new things at new places with new friends. This is completely me. I'm still a newbie and learning in every journey I take. It was never going to be easy. Kadang2 aku simpan duit untuk travel tapi duit yang travel dulu kesian..
2 ) Am I not afraid to travel alone ? đśđ My answer definitely is 80:20. Why ? 80% because once you managed to take your first step it shows that you able overcome your fear of being alone you find it is much interesting.X semua plan akan work smoothly, tapi relaxlah bila kau travel alone kau akan belajar untuk buat  decision quickly.  20% sifat takut tu  although I prefer alone, it is nice to have friend in some circumstances. For instance a travel buddy buat aku rasa less of a target in potentially dangerous locales. Kalau travel route tu aku yg plan sndiri, aku lebih  prefer travel dengan orang yang baru aku kenal dkt  airport dgn tujuan @ tmpat yg sama.
3)  Happy moments when travelling alone ? đ¤đ I cant quantified them. I also got lost. At times, I would not even bother checking Google maps out of a simple desire to interact with locals. Locals slalunya dia akan show alternative route yg lebih dekat and sometimes tempat2 rare yg cantik yg org tak tahu.
4) Â Bad moments when travelling alone ? đ Once, I shared two days hostel with another traveler from USA Â ( which is now being my friend ). I reached out to ppl mostly through the Couch Surfing app . She loves to drink. Always drunk at night. Satu malam tu dia terlampau mabuk, silap aku ajak dia berbual and guess what she vomitted dekat baju aku pastu sambung tido. Cisskek betul punya perangai, tapi esok pagi dia terus minta maaf and we laughed like nothing was happened. Hehe đđ
5) Parents ? 1) Aku cuba yakinkan mereka " kita ada kawan kat sana " haha walaupun kawan di alam maya ( kawan jugak kan đ tapi aku tak bagitahu la kawan alam maya ). Lama-lama dorang benarkan juga as long as aku pandai jaga diri 2) Jangan cerita bad exprience cakap yang happy jer sebab takut tak dapat green light pulak next time đ
6) How do I earned money ? đ¤ Kawan-kawan yg pernah satu bilik dengan aku kt UM tahu determination aku kalau bab travelling ni. Aku buat part time job,  volunteer job.Sebab aku jenis traveler bajet terhimpit kesian kan.  Ada orang spend duit untuk kahwin awal, kn tempat2 best atau hipster aku hanya mampu spend duit untuk travel sahaja setakat ni. Yg penting korang buat apa yang korang rasa happy dgn duit korang. Jgn lupa bersedekah jugak okay đ

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When someone does something that hurts you, make a promise to yourself & to Allah (swt) that you will never do the same thing to anyone else
"Eh eh mana aku, wat video ker" hahahaha Vape on guys ! Masih kah kau ingat ? @jida_razak @asb9214 @nhidayah_12 @tsukumishan #tb #vapeon #travelfemme #travelssbd #discoverJapan #passionpassport #beautifuldestinations #worldplaces #travelgram #theoutbound #Japan #wanderlust #instatravel #backpacker #wearetravelgirls #projectvacation #welivetoexplore #igers #backtracker
Sixteen Pieces Of Real Advice For 2016
SIXTEEN PIECES OF REAL ADVICE FOR 2016 DECEMBER 29, 2015
Realize that life is life and stuff is stuff. A shirt or a laptop is not going to change your life no matter how convincing that theory is when youâre buying it. Material doesnât change your life. People change your life. Experiences change your life. The Lord changes your life.
Donât finish mediocre books. Donât stay in mediocre relationships. Donât listen to mediocre music. If you want a great life, you canât choose mediocre.
Be around people who arenât afraid to be passionate, grasp dreams and fail in the process. Surround yourself with those confident in what they want and are constantly working on themselves in the present to prepare for their future in order to get it.
Know that it is okay to be sad. You donât have to apologize for being sad. You donât have to feel guilty for being sad. Sad is an emotion and you are entitled to it as a human being.
Appreciate technology but do not overuse it. Choose people over your phone. Save the Instagram scrolling for when you are alone. iPhones donât suddenly pass away in car accidents. iPhones donât have a soul. iPhones donât crave love. iPhones donât have a limited amount of days until their soul passes on. People do.
Donât limit yourself because someone can do it better. There will always be someone who has done it longer or done it better in your opinion. That should not hinder you from continuing your passion. No one has ever done it like you and thatâs what is significant about your delivery.
If it could potentially bring people to laughter while not harming or insulting anyone else, whether they are in the room or not, say it. Because laughter is worth it.
Know it is okay to feel like a mess. We are all messes. Learn to accept that and keep moving. The most adventurous way to function is by mispronouncing simple words and by living life with our zippers down every once in a while.
If you want to change the world, just be kind and love. Love is greater than pride, ego, or anything else in this whole world. Loving people is the kindest thing you will ever be able to do.
Figure out how to be honest, vulnerable and real; with yourself, with your God, with the people around you. Figure out that small talk is just that. Learn how to big talk and real talk.
A God sized hole cannot be filled with a beer bottle or a pill. The only thing that fits into a God sized hole is God Himself.
The greats are no different than you. The most brilliant ideas come from everyday people. All the movies you have seen, the books you have read, the songs you have heard come from a sprout of imagination while on a subway or walking a dog. The brilliance and innovation of the earth is discovered in the common souls.
There are variations of smart. Just because you canât write an essay well doesnât mean you canât fix a computer. Just because you canât pass a timed test, doesnât mean you canât change the world.
The hardest part of the day is to just get out of bed and get going. After youâre up, life starts happening. Get out of your metaphoric bed as well.
Doubt is going to make you fail before you have even begun. Think good thoughts and know you are well capable. The impossible has been done before and will be done again; the question is if you want to be apart of it.
Your personality and how you make others feel about themselves is 100x more important than your appearance. Seriously, no one really cares how your hair looks while you are insulting them.
http://www.brookeputney.us/sixteen-pieces-of-real-advice-for-2016/
www.crochetkalaakari.blogspot.com
hi, im so afraid about my pt3 results, the last time i checked, i've got 1A which is Bm (this is not including geo,sej, and oral bi&bm). ive got 4Bs, and ive got C for science and D for maths, can i be in sc stream class? thankyou. PS: can you give me some motivations cause im kinda feel lost and sad about my result
it really depends on your school tbh- whether you get into science stream or not because different schools have different streaming system. i got an A for maths and science so that kind of guaranteed my spot in the science stream.
for me i didnât really stress out a lot for pt3 because my year was the first batch of pt3 and i really thought they would drop the grade (but they didnât) so my plain goal was just get into science stream :) donât worry too much about pt3 because spm is the real deal hahah
as for motivation i canât really help you because iâm equally bad myself. but i started this studyblr and it helped me in some ways and i follow some very inspiring studyblrs here so i check their blog as a motivation.
one real advice would be just pick whichever stream you want to. donât pressurize yourself to get into science stream because only science stream students are deemed to be âsmarterâ than arts/any other stream. weâre not really. choose the stream which you want to venture in college etc. good luck kiddo, work hard in form 4. you can do it.

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How to finish that last minute assignment
I can not count the number of times this trick has saved my ass.
And people say Tumblr doesnât teach you life skillsâŚ
this will come in handy one day
ATTENTION GRADUATING CLASS OF 2013: COLLEGE SURVIVAL 101
Reblogging for future reference..
WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK!!!!
IâM GRADUATING COLLEGE IN TWO WEEKS! WHERE THE FUCK HAS THIS BEEN ALL MY LIFE?!?!
101 Study Tips
Take advantage of that lower workload in between exam periods to make good notes, clean your house, get work experience and do the things then rather than when youâre busier
Use Highlighters instead of pens to save time. Or vice versa depending on you
Change the timing in the pomodoro technique to suit you rather than the other way round
Use a planner to organise your day
Work out what time of day you study best. You could get up and study in the morning if youâre that sort of person
Attend your tutor or form sessions. Even if you donât do much in them, you can
Keep your planner small and carry it everywhere
Even better, put your planner on your phone
 Donât sulk if you fail, look back at why you failed and try to improve
If you get distracted by wanting to do something when you should be focusing, write it down. It gives you a checklist of things to do later
Do these things on the checklist in your study breaks
Answer questions without your teaching asking you to
Read about your subjects outside of your classes, especially in high school
Sit at the front of the class room
Donât sit by yourself in class
Get an early nights sleep
Or at least use sleepytime to get a good time frame
On school days when you wake up, get up straight away, it stops you lazing about
Work hard from the start of the year. There isnât a time to slack off
Try spaced repititon for learning key facts or a revision schedule
Have snacks and a drink during study sessions. Preferably water.
Summarise and make all your notes onto smaller bits of paper for revision, it helps you recognise what the important facts are
To avoid study stress, take breaks and avoid studying for more than two hours a day
Itâs also good to have a day where you donât study at all once a week
Donât schedule too far in advance, youâll just get busy in the meantime or change your methods
When youâre feeling too stressed to work properly but not studying stresses you out, do easier tasks like reviewing flashcards or watching videos on your course
Do as much of your work in school as possible
Prioritise your classes. Especially if you have loads
Make any big habit changes youâve been thinking of at the start of a term or new year
Study a little before bed, youâve probably seen that study that says you remember more just before bed
Only make flashcards of the things that you donât get or are important, not everything
Use online sites like Brainscape, Memrise, Anki or Quizlet for flashcards between devices
Print off your powerpoint slides before a lesson
If you canât do that, read ahead in the textbook
The syllabus is your guide, so use that as a framework for your revision notes
Your stress and nerves are normal, donât worry
Aim to finish your revision a week before your exams, it makes you start earlier and finish earlier, you also can rest before your exam
When you pick your subjects, choose the subjects you love
Donât drink alcohol when youâre studying or any type of drug while studying
Donât listen to how much everyone is studying. A lot of people big it up or say they do none, usually both arenât being truthful
Take messy notes in class and neaten them up later
Or take your notes online or on a computer
Have a folder to put your loose sheets and handouts in
Keep your to do list and schedule all in one place, whether thatâs a book, app or phone
If you fall behind or are ill a lot, your classmates are your friends for a realistic description of what youâve missed
When at school, know all the places youâd like to study in case one of them is busy
Donât work in your bed if it makes you tired
Or work in your bed if all your seats are uncomfortable and itâs distracting
Donât have too much coffee! And energy drinks are just terrible for you so maybe not have those either
You donât have to be truthful to your actual opinion in essays, just go for what option has the most points
Listen to your teacher
Have your window open, the fresh air helps
Use practice papers and questions, they really help
Try to teach others as well or if you canât, explain it in your own words to yourself
Combine more than one technique, so that the weaknesses of each method gets covered by another
Seriously just listen to your teachers
Check your emails every day
Set realistic goals and try not to be too harsh and unrealistic about the time youâll spend achieving these as well
Use loud and annoying alarms to get you to do things
If you have to read, read out loud rather than in your head
Use a hair tie if you have long hair to keep it out of your face
Keep clean and get dressed for studying
Donât waste your term making your notes pretty, if it helps, make sure the benefits outweigh the time it takes
Study when you can. Donât study if youâre too exhausted to do so.
Keep your desk as clean as you can
Know your sources of motivation. Possibly find a way to put that in your study space.
Attend as many classes as possible and donât skip
Keep yourself busy with stuff that isnât studying
Reward yourself for your hard work
Before you go back to school, start to wake up earlier so youâre ready
Wear comfortable clothes to school
Or wear whatever makes you feel good, feeling bad can be pretty distracting
Always think about the next step early, whether thats getting work experience, choosing subjects, finding a job or picking a thesis
Always eat breakfast
And always eat lunch too! Especially at school
Do whatever is best for you. Donât follow a studyblr trend, do whatâs best for you.
Make your studying a habit. Do it nearly every day for a long time and itâll begin to feel more like second nature
Get to know your teachers if you can
And donât be afraid to ask them for help outside of a lesson, either by email or afterwards, it helps a lotÂ
Look at the types of questions you often get wrong as well as the topics you keep missing out onÂ
Keep a spare bit of food in your bag, I usually have some sesame snaps in my bag as a small snack so I donât have to get up to get food
Make productive friends and people with similar goals to you
When revising, revise everything and then focus on your weak points
Donât spend too long on tumblr, and if you are right now, then this is your reminder to log off!
Donât panic when you donât know all the answers in a test, do you really need 100%?
Break your studying into smaller bits and spread it out over time to avoid headaches, burnout and all the problems that come with it
Eat better. Get enough fruit and vegetables
Donât forget about Protein, from meats, nuts, etc. it helps a lot
If youâre falling asleep in class, I usually drink water, pinch myself, take lots of notes and fidget to keep myself up
Regularly clear out your bag, because a lot of stuff builds up
If youâre a more artistic person, use drawings like visual notes, mindmaps, timelines and literal drawings to help you study
If you study with a friend, quiz each other
Study on public transport if you can, notes and flashcards on phones are good for this
Donât neglect any of your subjects, make sure they all get some time spent on them
Also focus beyond your first exam, itâs easy to overprepare for the first test and then not be ready for the rest
When taking a test look through it quickly before hand
Remember you donât have to take the test in order
Review your notes all the time, review helps the memory
If you want to pull an all-nighter see if you can do it in the morning or day instead, and donât do it the night before anything important
Always look at the details, especially if you get a mark-scheme or guide for your assignments
Constantly be taking on new improvements and trying to improve your methods