An executed purpose, in short, is a transaction in which the time and energy spent on the execution are balanced against the resulting assets, and the ideal case is one in which the formal approximates to zero and the latter to infinity.
Q1) How do you interprete 'executed purpose?'
Q2) Are be verbs 'are' and 'is' valid within the 'which' clause? The sentence structure looks complicated.
Q3) 'Formal' refers to 'time' and 'latter' refers to 'energy,' don't they?
Top answer
'- An accomplished task? Q2) Are be verbs 'are' and 'is' valid within the 'which' clause? - Yes, they are OK.
— Mister Micawber
'- An accomplished task?
Q2) Are be verbs 'are' and 'is' valid within the 'which' clause?
- Yes, they are OK.
-- It is a misprint; it should read ' former '.
'Former' refers to 'time + energy', and 'latter' refers to 'assets'.
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Q1) How do you interpret 'executed purpose?'- An accomplished task?
Q2) Are be verbs 'are' and 'is' valid within the 'which' clause? The sentence structure looks complicated.- Yes, they are OK.
Q3) 'Formal' refers to 'time' and 'latter' refers to 'energy,' don't they?-- It is a misprint; it should read 'former'. 'Former' refers to 'time + energy',