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Ghosting

An illegal practice whereby two or more market makers collectively attempt to influence and change the price of a stock. Ghosting is used by corrupt companies to affect stock prices so they can profit from the price movement.

Breaking It Down:
This practice is illegal because market makers are required by law to act in competition.
( source : investopedia )

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Can u Plz Mention Specific Stocks Name

Or If anyone Pay

I Will Do https://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/oh%20yes.gifhttps://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/oh%20yes.gifhttps://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/oh%20yes.gifhttps://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/oh%20yes.gif

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Your past Ghost @bluewine

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Ghosting is also taking over the EDM Scene…….In EDM small time DJ’s are paid to write music for the big DJ’s and are also required to sign NDA’s and they don’t get to work for any other person during the contract period.these ghost producers work while the big DJ’s party https://cdn2.desidime.com/assets/textile-editor/icon_toungueout.gif

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https://i.imgur.com/PefKS3S.jpg

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A train stops at a train station. A bus stops at a bus station. Now why is my desk called a ‘work station’? -————-

I think I’m emotionally constipated. I just can’t seem to give a sh*t

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How Pennies, Nickels, Dimes, Quarters and Dollars Got Their Names

The Penny

Prior to the United States minting their own coins, it relied on foreign currency. However, that all changed with the passing of the Coinage Act of 1792, which provided the framework for regulating money produced in the United States, as well as established the United States Mint.

A little over a month after the passing of theCoinage Act, An Act to Provide for a Copper Coinage was signed into law and the first official U.S. minted currency was slated to be created. Among the forms of currency to make up the U.S. monetary system was the copper cent and the half cent, first minted in 1793. Besides being called by that name, the cent also retained the name penny, borrowed from the name for Britain’s penny which had previously been commonly circulated in the country. As for the British penny, it got its name from the Old English penning, which in turn is thought to derive from the German pfennig.

The Nickel

The term nickel has not always been the name for the United States’ five-cent coin. You see, the half disme (pronounced like dime), as it was originally referred to, wasn’t made of nickel. Like the ten-cent coin, the half dime was made of silver and weighed exactly half of the dime, hence half the value.

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During the Civil War, many metals were needed to support war efforts, resulting in the majority of coins going out of circulation, including the half dime. After the war, a new type of five-cent piece was introduced, one made of a copper and nickel alloy rather than silver. It wasn’t until 1883, after intense lobbying efforts by industrialist Joseph Wharton, that the nickel alloy caught on, replacing the half dime and becoming widely circulated as the “nickel,” named after the metal by which it was made.

The Dime

The dime was technically the first coin made by the United States Mint, but using a borrowed coin machine four years before a Mint building was constructed. However, this dime, or disme as it was originally spelled, was not circulated and the first dime produced by the Mint to be used by the public wasn’t produced until 1796.

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As for the name, dime ultimately derives from the Latin word “decimus,” which means “one-tenth.” The term disme was used by the French to indicate a monetary value of tenth, and eventually the ‘s’ in the name for the coin was dropped to become dime.

The Quarter

Following suit with the dime, the quarter, which was first produced by the Mint in 1796, received its name to indicate its monetary worth as a quarter of a dollar.

This was a slightly unusual choice, as using a 1/5 denomination was more common in many currencies. However, at the time the Spanish dollar or peso (equal to 8 reales, thus “pieces of eight”) was widely circulated in the United States. In large part due to this, and perhaps further thumbing their noses a bit at the British, the U.S. chose to design the U.S. dollar to duplicate the Spanish coins, in terms of matching the material and weight, hence value (at the time, the coins were made of silver and valued after the price of silver).

Doing this allowed the U.S. coin to be exchanged for the widely circulated Spanish dollar in a 1 to 1 exchange, which was particularly beneficial for international trade and during the transition from foreign currencies to United States minted. (For instance, due to shortages of gold and silver, the U.S. was seamlessly able to extend legal tender status to the Spanish dollar in the late 18th century, something that wasn’t taken away until the mid-19th century.)

Thus, a 1/4 denomination was chosen, instead of a 1/5, to equal two Spanish reales, colloquially known as two-bits, hence why an alternate name for the quarter in the United States was two-bits.

The Dollar

The name dollar derives from the word thaler which is an abbreviation for the word Joachimsthaler, a coin type made from silver mined near Joachimsthal (literally “Joachim’s dale”) in Bohemia, first minted in 1519.

Eventually the mouthful of a name, Joachimsthaler, was shortened to just “thaler,” and, most notably for the topic at hand, ultimately lent its name to the Spanish pieces of eight, also called the Spanish dollar. As the U.S. dollar was modeled after the pieces of eight, it was natural enough to borrow dollar from the colloquial name for the Spanish currency.

Bonus Facts:

The original face of the U.S. penny symbolized liberty in the form of a woman with flowing hair. It wasn’t until 1909 that this image was replaced with the bust of Abraham Lincoln to commemorate the fallen president’s 100th birthday.
Look closely at the back of a penny featuring the Lincoln Memorial and you can see the famous president sitting inside the building.
The Thomas Jefferson Nickels were first minted in 1938. The design for these five-cent pieces resulted from a contest held by the United States Mint, the reward being $1,000. Out of the 390 contestants, the winner with the best design was Felix Schlag, a German immigrant who had only been a United States citizen for nine years. As part of his design for the Jefferson nickel, Felix Schlag chose to depict Thomas Jefferson’s Virginia home, the Monticello. Jefferson designed the building himself and construction took 55 years to complete.
Unlike the design of the nickel, which was chosen as the result of a contest, the obverse design of the dime that we know today was an intentional act to honor President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his efforts with the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, or March of Dimes, which he established when he was stricken with polio in the 1920s. Wanting to do Roosevelt justice, engraver John R. Sinnock was granted the honor of designing the dime due to how he captured President Roosevelt on a previous medal he had worked on.
The original designs of the dime and quarter did not include ridges around the circumference. When the United States started minting coins, these two coins were among those made with the precious metals silver and gold. Individuals trying to beat the system for profit would file the edges off the coins, to later combine the metal dust to form additional coins. Even though these coins are now made with cheaper metals, the ridged circumferences are still used today. The quarter has 119 ridges and the dime has 118 ridges around its edge.

Not wanting even the smallest suggestion of a tyrannical mindset to be associated with his presidency, George Washington refused the honor of having his visage on U.S. currency. Later on, the tradition that was born out of this became an actual federal law, stating not only that living presidents could not be featured on money, but that a president had to be dead for at least two years before his portrait could be minted on U.S. currency.

Although the earliest circulating U.S. coins often featured some representation of Lady Liberty, to date, the first time a real woman was featured on the design of a circulating coin was in 1979 when the dollar coin portrayed Susan B. Anthony. Since then, Sacagawea is seen on the dollar coin (1999 to present) and Helen Keller was included on the Alabama state quarter when it was issued in 2003 as part of the 50 States Quarter program. In addition, commemorative coins have portrayed Queen Isabella of Spain, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, and Virginia Dare with her mother Eleonor Dare on the obverse.
The average life of most coins is 25 years, whereas, the lifespan for the average dollar is only 18 months, leading some to push hard for a switch from paper dollars to coins. (For more on this, see: Racking Up Four Million Air Miles for Free- The Dollar Coin Scheme) When coins become too old and worn to be in circulation, the United States Mint recycles them and any usable metal from these coins is turned into coinage strips for new coins.

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This was an award winning question asked at Infosys campus interview:

you are driving a car from Ernakulam to bangalore. Car no is KL-44 B-567 The distance is 284 km. The car moves at 94km/hr. If it starts @ 10.16am rea ches banglor @ 5.46pm. What is the birth date of the driver?

Think! Brain work…

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@B@R_0_0_D wrote:

This was an award winning question asked at Infosys campus interview:

you are driving a car from Ernakulam to bangalore. Car no is KL-44 B-567 The distance is 284 km. The car moves at 94km/hr. If it starts @ 10.16am rea ches banglor @ 5.46pm. What is the birth date of the driver?

Think! Brain work…


Do We usually Ask DOB for ubber Drivers

?

If they asked this kinda question I could be the ceo of that company

Y am i still Jobless https://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/idiot.gif

Deal Major Deal Major
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@B@R_0_0_D wrote:

This was an award winning question asked at Infosys campus interview:

you are driving a car from Ernakulam to bangalore. Car no is KL-44 B-567 The distance is 284 km. The car moves at 94km/hr. If it starts @ 10.16am rea ches banglor @ 5.46pm. What is the birth date of the driver?

Think! Brain work…


https://cdn3.desidime.com/assets/textile-editor/icon_lol.gif bccho wala sawal , we used to ask it in childhood lyk tu train ka driver,itne passenger utre,itne chadhe on xyz station,then what’s the age of train driver https://cdn1.desidime.com/assets/textile-editor/icon_biggrin.gif
Driver toh mai hi hu https://cdn3.desidime.com/assets/textile-editor/icon_lol.gif

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"@Troll":http://www.desidime.com/users/428035 wrote:


Do We usually Ask DOB for ubber Drivers

?

If they asked this kinda question I could be the ceo of that company

Y am i still Jobless https://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/idiot.gif

An

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"@ankurg2109172":http://www.desidime.com/users/94567 wrote:

An

Answer is my age.. Since I am driving a car..

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@ankurg2109172 wrote:

"@ankurg2109172":http://www.desidime.com/users/94567 wrote:

An

Answer is my age.. Since I am driving a car..

are pata h

If u r driving Bt mera Licence nahi ab tak

so uber m hi drive ho payega

tume bhi resume send kar do infosys m

i am also applying although finance h qualification Bt i think they will hire me

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@Troll wrote:

@@Mia wrote:

@Troll wrote:

Can u Plz Mention Specific Stocks Name

Or If anyone Pay

I Will Do https://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/oh%20yes.gifhttps://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/oh%20yes.gifhttps://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/oh%20yes.gifhttps://cdn0.desidime.com/smileys/oh%20yes.gif


https://in.finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=ZODIACVEN.B...=


wat up with this Can not buy now neither sell since dont have any

I lik this

https://in.finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=AADHAARVEN....

Or u Just Lik KingFisher ?


Maruti Suzuki | TP – Rs5,250 (+17%) | Rating: BUY
https://cdn0.desidime.com/attachments/photos/437381/medium/2761993hgh.jpg?1481034552
img host

or
http://www.moneycontrol.com/india/stockpricequo...
buy this one sure shot profit

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Analogies used by students in essays

1. When she tried to sing, it sounded like a walrus giving birth to farm equipment.

2. Her eyes twinkled, like the moustache of a man with a cold.

3. She was like a magnet: Attractive from the back, repulsive from the front.

4. The ballerina rose gracefully en pointe and extended one slender leg
behind her, like a dog at a fire hydrant.

5. She grew on him like she was a colony of E. coli and he was room
temperature Canadian beef.

6. She had him like a toenail stuck in a shag carpet.

7. The lamp just sat there, like an inanimate object.

8. Her face was a perfect oval, like a circle that had two sides gently
compressed by a Thigh Master.

9. Her eyes were like the stars, not because they twinkle,
but because they were so far apart.

10. His career was blowing up like a man with a broken metal detector
walking through an active minefield.

11. The sun was below the watery horizon, like a diabetic
grandma easing into a warm salt bath.

12. From the attic came an unearthly howl. The whole scene had an eerie,
surreal quality, like when you’re on vacation in another city and
Jeopardy comes at a 7:00 p.m. Instead of 7:30.

13. It was as easy as taking candy from a diabetic man who
no longer wishes to eat candy.

14. She had a deep, throaty, genuine laugh, like that sound a
dog makes before it throws up.

15. Their love burned with the fiery intensity of a urinary tract infection.

16. It’s basically an illusion and no different than if I were to imagine
something else, like Batman riding a flying toaster.

17. If it was any colder, it would be like being in a place that’s
a little colder than it is here.

18. Joy fills her heart like a silent but deadly fart fills a room with no windows.

19. The bird flew gracefully into the air like a man stepping on a landmine in zero gravity.

20. He felt confused. As confused as a homeless man on house arrest.

21. The revelation that his marriage of 30 years had disintegrated because
of his wife’s infidelity came as a rude shock, like a surcharge at a
formerly surcharge-free ATM.


As you saunter through the leaves of life,
may all the dog poop be on the other side of the road.
-—————-

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@B@R_0_0_D wrote:

Analogies used by students in essays


1. When she tried to sing, it sounded like a walrus giving birth to farm equipment.

2. Her eyes twinkled, like the moustache of a man with a cold.

3. She was like a magnet: Attractive from the back, repulsive from the front.

4. The ballerina rose gracefully en pointe and extended one slender leg
behind her, like a dog at a fire hydrant.

5. She grew on him like she was a colony of E. coli and he was room
temperature Canadian beef.

6. She had him like a toenail stuck in a shag carpet.

7. The lamp just sat there, like an inanimate object.

8. Her face was a perfect oval, like a circle that had two sides gently
compressed by a Thigh Master.

9. Her eyes were like the stars, not because they twinkle,
but because they were so far apart.

10. His career was blowing up like a man with a broken metal detector
walking through an active minefield.

11. The sun was below the watery horizon, like a diabetic
grandma easing into a warm salt bath.

12. From the attic came an unearthly howl. The whole scene had an eerie,
surreal quality, like when you’re on vacation in another city and
Jeopardy comes at a 7:00 p.m. Instead of 7:30.

13. It was as easy as taking candy from a diabetic man who
no longer wishes to eat candy.

14. She had a deep, throaty, genuine laugh, like that sound a
dog makes before it throws up.

15. Their love burned with the fiery intensity of a urinary tract infection.

16. It’s basically an illusion and no different than if I were to imagine
something else, like Batman riding a flying toaster.

17. If it was any colder, it would be like being in a place that’s
a little colder than it is here.

18. Joy fills her heart like a silent but deadly fart fills a room with no windows.

19. The bird flew gracefully into the air like a man stepping on a landmine in zero gravity.

20. He felt confused. As confused as a homeless man on house arrest.

21. The revelation that his marriage of 30 years had disintegrated because
of his wife’s infidelity came as a rude shock, like a surcharge at a
formerly surcharge-free ATM.

-——————

As you saunter through the leaves of life,
may all the dog poop be on the other side of the road.
-—————-


https://cdn2.desidime.com/assets/textile-editor/icon_smile.gif https://cdn2.desidime.com/assets/textile-editor/icon_smile.gif https://cdn2.desidime.com/assets/textile-editor/icon_smile.gif

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WORTH PONDERING

He that once deceives is ever
suspected

It is more profitable to correct our defects than
to boast of our attainments.

Did is a word of achievement, won’t is a word of retreat, might is a
word of bereavement, can’t is a word of defeat, should is word of duty,
try is a word of each hour, will is a word of beauty, can is a word of power.

Someone else is praying for the things you take for Granted.

Obey one who is above you (in authority) and
the one below you will obey you.

Almighty God won’t ask how many people you ‘share ’ a piece of information,
BUT He’ll ask why you were ashamed to share it with others ?

He who seeks forgiveness with his tongue but does not feel
remorse in his heart has fooled himself.

Some people can be mean and treat you poorly. Don’t take it personally.
It says nothing about you but a lot about them.

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https://i.imgur.com/uUPks8z.jpg

@Plato

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https://i.imgur.com/2S1Mg8B.jpg

@exzed @@CrazyTroll@@

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https://i.imgur.com/9Cihp0W.jpg

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https://i.imgur.com/EgDskpS.jpg

New cabinet ministers

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A substitute is a good that satisfies the same needs as another

A substitute can be perfect or imperfect, depending on the degree of customer satisfaction.

For example, if a consumer substitutes Coke for Pepsi and is completely satisfied, then Coke is a perfect substitute for Pepsi. If a consumer is not completely satisfied with the exchange, finding some difference between the two products, then one is an imperfect substitute for the other.

Consumers use substitute goods when the price of one product increases and compels them to find an alternative that’s less expensive.

Two close substitute goods have a positive cross elasticity of demand, a measurement of the demand for one good when another’s price changes. For example, if the price for Pepsi went up, so too would the demand for Coke.

If two goods are not close substitutes, a change in one’s price will not impact the demand for the other. So Pepsi’s price would probably not be affected by a rise in milk’s price.

Read more: What are Substitute Goods? – Video | Investopedia http://www.investopedia.com/video/play/what-are...

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When to Use Empathy

sympathy v empathy

Empathy is a noun and is defined as, “the ability to indentify with or understand another’s situation or feelings.”

For example,

I have empathy for those families who lost their house in the storm. A tornado once destroyed my house.
Having been late to work many times himself, the boss had empathy on the employee who was late.
Empathy is putting yourself in someone else’s shoes to understand that person’s situation. In the

example above, the boss, having been late to work himself, had empathy for and understood why the employee was late for work.

Empathy is the newer of the two words, with its first use recorded in 1895. Sympathy,

on the other hand, has a first recorded use in the late 1500s.

When to Use Sympathy

empathy v sympathy cartoon video

Sympathy is a noun and is defined as, “a feeling of pity or sorrow for the distress of another.” For example,

I offered my sympathy to the grieving mother.
Their sympathy for the victims led them to donate.
So you can clearly see the difference between the two words. Sympathy is a compassion and

sorrow one feels for another, but empathy is more focused around personally identifying with

or projecting oneself into another’s situation.

You may feel bad for the person who was just laid off from their job, but if you have never been laid off yourself,

you cannot have empathy for him or her. You can feel sorry, have compassion, and give them sympathy,

but you can’t have empathy for their situation.

Empathize vs. Sympathize

This same thought process underlines the two verb forms of empathy and sympathy, empathize and

sympathize. Empathize denotes a stronger, more personal sense of shared feeling than does sympathize.

This doesn’t mean, however, that you cannot use sympathy or sympathize to describe “sharing or

understanding the feelings of another.” The word sympathize is 300 years empathy’s senior with this meaning.

You can share or even understand the pain someone is going through without going through it yourself.

Empathy, and by extension empathize, is the power of projecting one’s personality into (and so

fully comprehending) the object of contemplation. It is much more

personal and specific than sympathy.

To give another example, I may sympathize with the person whose house was just burglarized because

I can understand how vulnerable it must make one feel, but I cannot have empathy

because my house has never been robbed.

Remember the Difference

Here are two tricks to remember which of these words is which:

You can remember that sympathy deals with sorrows and feeling sorry for someone because it starts with an “S.”

Similarly, you can remember that empathy is more personal and requires you to put yourself in that

person’s shoes. Shoes and empathy both have an “E” in them.

Summary

The two words sympathy vs. empathy cause a bit of confusion in people’s writing, but they have different meanings.

Empathy is more specific and personal than sympathy. It involves personally putting yourself in that

persons shoes and knowing what they are going through.

Sympathy is a more general feeling or sorrow for another person’s situation.

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Source : ET

Interglobe Aviation, which owns India’s only consistently profitable airline IndiGo, caused a bit of a stir during its initial public offer early last month. Reason: Despite making a profit of ₹640 crore during the June quarter, the company reported negative networth to the tune of ₹139 crore as on its last balance sheet date. This was largely on account of a ₹1,103-crore dividend that the promoters decided to pay themselves ahead of the offer.

What is it?

In accounting terms, networth is the total owner’s capital invested in a company. Networth consists of both initial share capital raised from promoters and others, and the company’s profits accumulated over the years. Accumulated profits are also termed as reserves and surpluses. A company with negative networth is presumed to be on a weak footing because it usually shows that the business is loss-making and has hardly any own capital left to fund future expansion.

In Interglobe’s case, though, the airline was quite profitable, the liberal dividends paid out ahead of the offer drained its networth and took it (briefly) into negative territory.

Under normal circumstances, a company’s networth can change due to two factors — infusion of capital and the profits or losses from operations. Any addition to capital by way of a fresh share issue will result in an increase in networth. Likewise, if the company has surplus profit available after paying dividend to its shareholders, this will be transferred to its reserves and surplus, and increase its networth. If an enterprise reels under losses, that will lead to a depletion in the networth.

Besides all this, of course, if a firm decides to pay dividend far higher than the outstanding balance in its reserves and surplus account, it may lead to a negative or deficit networth.

Why is it important?

While the Interglobe case was an exception, it is usually chronically loss-making companies that carry negative networth in their balance sheet. A company’s networth is a key indicator of its financial health. For one, it indicates the extent of owner’s capital that the firm has to meet its future expansion and capital needs. Networth per share, which is also called book value per share, is used to gauge the intrinsic value of a company’s business as well.

This is why even the statutory auditors examining a company’s books of accounts are required to make a special mention to shareholders in their report, if they find that the company has run up a negative networth in any accounting period. A negative networth is normally a warning that the company needs a quick infusion of fresh equity.

Why should I care?

If you are an equity investor, it is pertinent to keep a tab on your company’s networth. It will tell you if there are any assets left for you as a shareholder, should the company’s operations become unviable and warrant closure. If the company’s networth is negative or deficit and the entity makes losses, it may be a warning signal for you as an investor to exit your investment.

The bottomline

The IndiGo case showed that you cannot judge a company by its networth alone. But when you are making your market debut, appearances do matter. The firm’s negative networth may have weighed against it, at least with retail investors.

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A Poem On Human Anatomy

Where can a man buy a cap for his knee,
Or the key to a lock of his hair?
Can his eyes be called an academy?
Because there are pupils there?

In the crown of your head can jewels be found?
Who crosses the bridge of your nose?

If you wanted to shingle the roof of your mouth,

Would you use the nails on your toes?

Can you sit in the shade of the palm of your hand,

Or beat on the drum of your ear?

Can the calf in your leg eat the corn off your toe?

Then why not grow corn on the ear?

Can the crook in your elbow be sent to jail?
If so, just what did he do?
How can you sharpen your shoulder blades?

I’ll be darned if I know – do you?

And finally can you find drawers in your Chest.

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