English

Cards (24)

  • Red
    Prohibitions,regulations, and hazards signal
  • Yellow
    A sign of precaution
  • Blue
    General information, permission, and mandatory signs.
  • Green
    First aid and emergency information, e.g, fire exits
  • Positive Messages
    in safety signs are messages that give the viewer a sense of guidance on what are allowed and required in a vicinity. There also give viewers directional instructions that are oftentimes mandatory. Especially what to do during emergency. As a whole, these are positive messages because if you follow these signs, your safety is guaranteed or certain risks are avoided.
  • Negative Messages
    in safety signs, on the contrary, express warning, precautions, regulations, and prohibitions. These messages tell you what you must not do. These are negative messages because these signs are placed necessarily as an alarm to define dangers, and if you do not take heed, negative or unfavorable circumstances might arise, such as accidents or injuries.
  • Neutral words
    defer, hold up interrupt

    continue

    person with cognitive disability

    unseeing

    follower
  • Positive Words
    pause, cease temporarily

    persist, dwell, prevail

    mentally challenged

    visually impaired

    advocate
  • Negative Words
    stop/desist

    linger

    retarded

    blind

    vassal ,zealot, sycophant
  • Verbal Irony
    the phrasing of words in a manner that what you mean is the opposite of what you said.
  • Situational Irony
    This is also known as an event irony, as this involves a realization that the opposite of what is meant to occur takes place. This shows a disparity between what you expect from happening and what, in fact, does.
  • Dramatic Irony
    The viewers or the readers know something that the character does not know of.
  • Tone
    The attitude of the writer toward the chosen topic that the reader can infer from his or her word choices
  • Mood
    The overall emotional vibe depicted in a story; the kind of emotion that is built up among the reader as they read the text
  • Technique
    The style, strategies, and devices used by the writer to create a certain effect
  • Purpose of the Author
    The reasons or the intention of the writer in writing the text
  • Negative message
    It may impart a warning a prohibition, or an offense.
  • Positive message
    It sends goodwill or draws upon a positive action. It provide an alternative or solution.
  • prefix
    beginning of word
  • Suffix
    At the end of a word
  • Latent Heat of condesantion
    As the condensation of water continues, the latent heat energy stored in it is released. This provides the clouds with more power creating a self-sustaining heat cycle. As a result, the clouds thicken and become heavy, and it continues to grow towering at about 12 to 15 km high in the troposphere.
  • Coriolis Force
    The force rendered by Earth's rotation due to its tilted axis affects wind movement. Thus, Coriolis force affects the rising air from the surface to spiral around the center or the thick clouds forming a vortex called eye, commonly known as the "eye of the storm." It moves counterclockwise, and it's diameter could be as wide as 370 km
  • Landmasses affect tropical cyclones
    A tropical cyclone weakens during and after its landfall. The moment a tropical cyclone passes a landmass, it is affected by various factors such as presence of forests, mountain ranges, and the topography of the area where they land. However, the lack of warm, moist air as its energy source can severely weaken a tropical cyclone.
  • Typhoon Haiyan
    (locally known as Super Typhoon Yolanda) reached a maximum sustained wind of 315 km/h? It is one of the strongest tropical cyclones ever recorded.