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California Digital Library contemporaryengl00beatrich (User talk:Fæ/IA books#Fork20) (batch #26364) File usage No pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed).
Note-taking has been an important part of human history and scientific development. The Ancient Greeks developed hypomnema, personal records on important subjects.In the Renaissance and early modern period, students learned to take notes in schools, academies and universities, often producing beautiful volumes that served as reference works after they finished their studies.
CliffsNotes are a series of student study guides. The guides present and create literary and other works in pamphlet form or online. Detractors of the study guides claim they let students bypass reading the assigned literature.
Lecture Notes in Computer Science; Lecture Notes in Mathematics; Lecture Notes in Physics; Lectures and Conversations on Aesthetics, Psychology, and Religious Belief; Lectures from Colombo to Almora; Lectures in Geometric Combinatorics; Lectures of the Three Degrees in Craft Masonry; Lectures on Aesthetics; Lectures on Faith; Lectures on ...
Rembrandt's The Anatomy Lecture of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp (1632) Even in the twentieth century, the lecture notes taken by students, or prepared by a scholar for a lecture, have sometimes achieved wide circulation (see, for example, the genesis of Ferdinand de Saussure's Cours de linguistique générale). Many lecturers were, and still are ...
The contrasting three, where only the third has positive value, for example, The Three Little Pigs, two of whose houses are blown down by the Big Bad Wolf. The final or dialectical form of three, where, as with Goldilocks and her bowls of porridge, the first is wrong in one way, the second in an opposite way, and the third is "just right".
The J. R. R. Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature is a free public lecture delivered annually at Pembroke College, Oxford.. The series was founded by Pembroke postgraduate students Will Badger and Gabriel Schenk in memory of J. R. R. Tolkien, who was Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon at Pembroke from 1925 until 1945.