Answer:
fortunes
Explanation:
because fortunes symbolizes the amount which the writer is talking in
Answer:Hope this will help
The whale was enormous
Answer:
1. Mike<u> told me</u> that he would be here tomorrow.
2. Lucy said that they were living in mexico city.
3. Mike said that he <u>was working,now.</u>
4. Lucy asked me <u>if i could speak french.</u>
5. Mike told me that they had gone to Mallorca the previous summer.
6. Lucy told me that she could ice-skate very well
.
7. Mike told me that <u> he has never seen that movie.</u>
8. Lucy asked me <u> where I studied.</u>
9. Mike
asked you if you could help me with my homework.
10. Lucy <u>told us not to smoke in the buiding.</u>
11. If i had a lot of money,I would buy a new house
.
12. I wouldn`t drink so much<u> If I had to drive.</u>
13.If I have a car, I would give you a ride.
14. I wouldn`t have failed the exam if
I had studied more
.
15.If I <u>lost</u> keys, I <u>wouldn`t have</u> called you.
Explanation:
Subordinate means someone who is of lower rank in a job. So the manager spoke to someone in a lower rank than him in a cordial tone.
Answer:
Prospects for Trade between Nigeria and its Neighbours is a new study undertaken by the Laboratoire d'Analyse Régionale et d'Expertise Sociale (LARES) in Cotonou (Benin), commissioned by the Club du Sahel1. Presented as a series of concise, well documented "fact sheets", this study will be of interest to public policy experts and entrepreneurs who believe that regional trade development is a necessary response to globalisation.
The study outlines the still very weak and undiversified trade in the region, the consequences of the asymmetric relation between Nigeria and the other countries as well as the important position occupied by oil products in regional trade.
It examines the recent developments in Nigeria's economic policy marked by a reduction in protectionism and the liberalisation of foreign exchange markets and its presently modest impact on regional trade. The study also highlights the role of the very informal trading networks which control the major part of regional trade and the institutional, financial and material obstacles to their development. The importance of the informal sector is underlined by the parallel foreign exchange market which operates throughout the region. Its pervasiveness illustrates both the region's development potential and the need for fundamental public policy reforms.