Lemon shows how social you are
à¤िडियो हेर्न तल को बक्समा क्लिक गर्नुहोस
How social are you? Meaning how openly do you speak with other people? Do you get along? Or are you a loner?
If someone asks you this you might have to think, remember how much to you like to go out with hers, how much do you mingle and how much do you speak with a stranger. But sad thing is that no one gives the true answer to this. Like you do go to parties but only with your friends. This does not show that you are an introvert.
Noe psychologist are trying to get the answers of these question through lemon. Yes, a lemon can determine how social you are or introvert or extrovert. This is a very old way method to know people’s behavior.
For it:
Tie a q-tip with a string so that it can be hung.
Keep one end of the q-tip in your mouth for 20 seconds till it gets wet.
Now take it from your mouth and suck on a lemon.
Again keep another end inside your mouth like before.
Now take it out from your mouth and hand it with the help of a string. Make sure the string is in the center.
Now see which side is heavier. The lemon one or the other one.
If the lemon side is heavier it means that you are an introvert and you only thing about yourself.
If both the side are balanced, it means that you are a very social person.
This way of knowing a person’s behavior is ages old. This method has been invented by German scientists and his wife. In the method they had actually measured the weight of both sides of the q-tips.
Normally, a person’s behavior is allocated by their heredity. The behavior of parents make a clear impression on a person. So, the theory of the German couples concluded only half the fact.
Read this also
Maritime insurance was the earliest well-developed kind of insurance, with origins in the Greek and Roman maritime loan. Separate marine insurance contracts were developed in Genoa and other Italian cities in the fourteenth century and spread to northern Europe. Premiums varied with intuitive estimates of the variable risk from seasons and pirates.[1] Modern marine insurance law originated in the Lex mercatoria (law merchant). In 1601, a specialized chamber of assurance separate from the other Courts was established in England. By the end of the seventeenth century, London's growing importance as a centre for trade was increasing demand for marine insurance. In the late 1680s, Edward Lloyd opened a coffee house on Tower Street in London. It soon became a popular haunt for ship owners, merchants, and ships' captains, and thereby a reliable source of the latest shipping news.[2]
Lloyd's Coffee House was the first marine insurance market. It became the meeting place for parties in the shipping industry wishing to insure cargoes and ships, and those willing to underwrite such ventures. These informal beginnings led to the establishment of the insurance market Lloyd's of London and several related shipping and insurance businesses. The participating members of the insurance arrangement eventually formed a committee and moved to the Royal Exchange on Cornhill as the Society of Lloyd's. The establishment of insurance companies, a developing infrastructure of specialists (such as shipbrokers, admiralty lawyers, bankers, surveyors, loss adjusters, general average adjusters, et al.), and the growth of the British Empire gave English law a prominence in this area which it largely maintains and forms the basis of almost all modern practice. Lord Mansfield, Lord Chief Justice in the mid-eighteenth century, began the merging of law merchant and common law principles. The growth of the London insurance market led to the standardization of policies and judicial precedent further developed marine insurance law. In 1906 the Marine Insurance Act codified the previous common law; it is both an extremely thorough and concise piece of work. Although the title of the Act refers to marine insurance, the general principles have been applied to all non-life insurance. In the 19th century, Lloyd's and the Institute of London Underwriters (a grouping of London company insurers) developed between them standardized clauses for the use of marine insurance, and these have been maintained since. These are known as the Institute Clauses because the Institute covered the cost of their publication. Out of marine insurance, grew non-marine insurance and reinsurance. Marine insurance traditionally formed the majority of business underwritten at Lloyd's. Nowadays, Marine insurance is often grouped with Aviation and Transit (cargo) risks, and in this form is known by the acronym
तल को बक्समा क्लिक गर्नुहोस
Lemon shows how social you are
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