Business English focuses on vocabulary used in the business world- trades, finance, industrial/commercial. It is the communication used in marketing and negotiating. Literary English is the language used in literary writing. It is the langauge that was used before, the past eras. It is deep and oftentimes with metaphors.
compare and contrast business english with other kids like litearcy english
There is no such thing as "business" English. Business language may ring with high oratory or clank with low advertising copy. Usually the latter, granted and here's a clue: if it is trying to sell you something, or if it is detailing quarterly corporate accounts or the history of a McDonald's franchise it is not literary English.
Things you can compare/contrast are;locationareapopulationclimateUse sentences that compare -- the population of Japan is bigger than the population of the BahamasUse sentences that contrast -- the climate of Japan is changeable whereas the climate of the Bahamas is the same year round
Germans are have blue eyes and speak English. japan have chinky eyes and speak Japanese.
Compare and Contrast between Goethe's "Faust" and Marlowe's "Doctor Faustus".
Precise your question. Is it about the United States, all of North America, other countries?
There is no such English word as discompare.The opposite of compare would be not to compare. The similar word contrast may be opposite because it means to examine the differences between things rather than similarities.
ydhdjdzzjs Compare, means to take two or more items, and look at how different or similar they are, either by how they are made, what they contain etc. Contrast is virtually the same except that it can be used artistically, eg the difference between dark and light shades is contrast....gosh isn't English difficult !!
fur trade and agriculture both colonies settlend in new England areas
English Literary Renaissance was created in 1971.
English language literary devices:AllegoryAlliterationAllusionAnalogyAssonanceClimaxForeshadowingHyperboleMetaphorOnomatopoeiaOxymoronPersonificationPunSimile
To compare and contrast two things means to find the similarities and differences between them. For example, compare and contrast the islands of Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Both have mountains, but Hawaii has volcanos. The residents of both are American Citizens, but those in Hawaii speak English and those in Puerto Rico speak Spanish. Both are tropical islands, but the mountains in Hawaii are tall enough to have some temperate zone plants.