There are multiple triggers for this business like there are far off locations with poor connectivity and projects in backward regions but the company has not been able to capitalise on it because there are very low entry barriers in the industry. As a result there are a few international players who own mixed fleet of aircrafts which are economical for short routes. In short they have not been able to make a mark in the industry as such.
The main business which caught my eye was the engineering design service which has been growing steadily for the past few years and this time reported a 18% increase in total revenue and a profit jump of 32%(The reason i say it is 32% is bcoz there ws a total other income of 8 crs of which 3 crs was for air charter division so the remaining 5 crs must have come from the EDS business so the profit from this segment comes to around 15 crs.)
TTIPL is a niche Engineering and Technology solutions provider serving global corporations in their pursuit for faster innovation and technological excellence. TTIPL provides Product Engineering Services, R&D Services and IT Services customized to the specific needs of every individual customer.
Over a period of three years i.e the company has clocked a CAGR on sales at 27.25% and PBT of 159%. The company is growing steadily and should continue to do so. Do not have too much info about this company but in hindsight the company seems to be performing well.
From a profit of 30.78 lakh in 2014-15 the company has clocked a PBT of 15.87 crs.(excluding other income).
It is very difficult to say what exactly taal tech is into as there is very little or no info about it in the net as well as the annual report but i have seen that they are hiring a lot of people who are ready to travel outside india so i am guessing that they might show decent growth in the near future as well.
. Yes true. But plannng to meet them. At least if we can find their views and vision. Biggest problem is presently all the profit is in subsidiary. And consolidated result comes at the year end so we are fighting blind folded till then
Ellyn'taal was an abandoned illithid city of the northern parts of the Underdark.[2] The once-populated chambers of the city were carved with scriptures of the mind flayers. Staying in the empty halls of Ellyn'taal too long could cause one to become mad. Only undead servants and mind flayer ghosts inhabited the city, as well as the undead elder brain, Ioulaum.[3]
Information about the ancient magocracy of Netheril could be found here, but only for a very steep price.[2] In exchange for such knowledge, one would lose part of their sanity or their knowledge of an epic spell, which would be lost to them for eternity.[3]
In -371 DR, the Netherese arcanist, Ioulaum, became a lich and established a base close to Ellyn'taal. In -339 DR, he foresaw that the fall of the Netherese empire was nigh. Thus, he abandoned his enclave permanently and laired in the base he had previously established.[1][4] Ioulaum took apprentices from both the Netherese refugees, and also the mindflayers of Ellyn'taal. These illithids were known as the Alhoon and became the very first illithiliches (which would later generally become known as alhoons).[1]
Ioulaum took the minds of his illithid students and created an undead elder brain; he then merged his own mind with it. Almost all of Ioulaum's students perished in the production of the elder brain, but some of them escaped. The escapee mind flayers told the story of the creation of an undead elder brain to those of the Underdark. One of Ioulaum's human students, Tabra, saw the production of the elder brain, and believed that the mind flayer students had destroyed her master. In response, she made her way to Ellyn'taal and cast Ioulaum's longevity on herself, destroying the city-dwelling illithids in the process.[1] She was still alive as of the 15th century DR.[5]
Taal & Tongval: Language Variation in the Low Countries is a peer-reviewed, academic journal devoted to the scientific study of language variation in the Netherlands and Flanders, in neighbouring areas and in languages related to Dutch. All types of variation are covered, including but not restricted to geographical, social, ethnic, stylistic and diachronic variation. Articles may deal with all aspects of human language. The journal welcomes both empirical work as studies linking language variation to developments in theoretical linguistics. More about Taal & Tongval...Taal & Tongval is een wetenschappelijk tijdschrift over taalvariatie in Nederland en Vlaanderen, waarin ook aandacht wordt geschonken aan naburige taalgebieden en aan het Nederlands verwante talen. Alle vormen van variatie kunnen worden besproken zoals geografische, sociale, etnische, stilistische en diachrone variatie. Verder mogen daarbij ook alle aspecten van de menselijke taal aan de orde komen. Het blad staat zowel open voor empirisch werk als voor studies die een verbinding leggen tussen taalvariatie en theoretische taalkunde. Meer over Taal & Tongval...
Editors: Anne Breitbarth, Gunther De Vogelaer, Dirk Geeraerts, Roeland van Hout, Wim Vandenbussche, Martijn Wieling en Ton van der Wouden.
Goede kennis van een taal gaat verder dan het leren van woorden en grammatica. Als taaldeskundige moet je ook wetenschappelijk inzicht hebben in taal. Dit boek geeft een inleiding in de Nederlandse taalkunde. Er is daarbij rekening gehouden met niet-moedertaalsprekers. Daardoor is het boek ook uitermate geschikt voor taalkunde onderwijs aan universiteiten en hogescholen extra muros.
In dertien hoofdstukken introduceren de auteurs de belangrijkste taalkundige deelgebieden. Daarnaast bieden zij inkijkjes in verschillende taalkundige disciplines zoals psycholingustiek, historische taalkunde en taalverwerving. Ze sluiten ieder hoofdstuk af met oefenopdrachten.
Niet te disciplineren: het gebruik van literatuur in andere vakgebieden Literaire teksten verbeelden niet alleen, maar doen ook iets in de wereld. Hoewel er uitvoerig over kan worden gedebatteerd wat dat 'iets' zou moeten zijn, is het duidelijk dat literatuur een effect heeft op lezers, die haar vaak op heel verschillende manieren 'gebruiken'. Verschillende onderzoekers hebben onlangs betoogd dat de leeswijze van literatuurwetenschappers (door Jim Collins plagerig omschreven als 'beschaafd lezen') methodologische beperkingen oplegt die niet noodzakelijkerwijs worden gedeeld door andere gebruikers van literatuur (Collins 2010, Felski 2008).
Met deze vragen beogen we niet alleen een staalkaart te presenteren van het gebruik van literatuur in andere vakgebieden, maar ook bij te dragen aan een verdere uitwisseling van kennis en inzichten omtrent de werking van literaire teksten tussen vakgebieden.
De gastredactie is in handen van Carlijn Cober (Radboud Universiteit), Esther Op de Beek (Universiteit Leiden), Tom Sintobin (Radboud Universiteit) en Marieke Winkler (Open Universiteit). Contact: [email protected]
Literatuur
Collins, Jim, Bring On The Books For Everybody. How Literary Culture Became Popular Culture. Durham, NC/London, Duke University Press, 2010.
Felski, Rita, Uses of Literature. A Manifesto for Positive Aesthetics. Blackwell Manifesto Series. Malden, MA/Oxford, Wiley- Blackwell, 2008.