If someone asks you to describe the economic state of affairs of countries in as few words as possible, how would you do that?
Well, I tried my hand at taking the help of English Grammer, and here are the results:
USA - Past Perfect
(Has a great recent past, economically, but future looks bleak)
Eurozone - Present Tense
(Going through hell right now)
China - Future Tense
(I think it is going to be a tense future there)
India - Hyperbole
(Too much talk by Govt, and precious little by way of action)
Dubai - Full stop
(Went full throttle and abruptly stopped)
Singapore - Exclamation
(Wow! What a growth fora tiny nation!)
USA and China's mutual dependence - Paired Construction
( One cannot survive without the other, for now)
Bernanke's testimony to Congress - Figure of speech
(His speeches are full of figures, but nothing else of substance)
Greece continuing in Eurozone - Etymology
(Etymology in Greek literally means " putting dissimilar things together)
Obama's State of the Union Address - Rhetorical punctuation
( Full of rhetorics like " let us change the world"... nothing has changed)
Pranab Mukherjee saying " austerity measures needed" ahead of raising taxes - pre-position
(Warning to people to be prapred for more taxes, so that corrupt netas can continue to swindle even more)
Eurozone crisis along side American economic collapse - Conjunction
(They always seem to happen in pair - the rise or fall)
The US Govt indulging in Quantitative Easing to stop the economic rot - Interjection
( Desperate bid to halt the momentum of economic decadence)
Well, I tried my hand at taking the help of English Grammer, and here are the results:
USA - Past Perfect
(Has a great recent past, economically, but future looks bleak)
Eurozone - Present Tense
(Going through hell right now)
China - Future Tense
(I think it is going to be a tense future there)
India - Hyperbole
(Too much talk by Govt, and precious little by way of action)
Dubai - Full stop
(Went full throttle and abruptly stopped)
Singapore - Exclamation
(Wow! What a growth fora tiny nation!)
USA and China's mutual dependence - Paired Construction
( One cannot survive without the other, for now)
Bernanke's testimony to Congress - Figure of speech
(His speeches are full of figures, but nothing else of substance)
Greece continuing in Eurozone - Etymology
(Etymology in Greek literally means " putting dissimilar things together)
Obama's State of the Union Address - Rhetorical punctuation
( Full of rhetorics like " let us change the world"... nothing has changed)
Pranab Mukherjee saying " austerity measures needed" ahead of raising taxes - pre-position
(Warning to people to be prapred for more taxes, so that corrupt netas can continue to swindle even more)
Eurozone crisis along side American economic collapse - Conjunction
(They always seem to happen in pair - the rise or fall)
The US Govt indulging in Quantitative Easing to stop the economic rot - Interjection
( Desperate bid to halt the momentum of economic decadence)
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