Preferences are personal opinions about what and how to like things. Our preferences change with age and external factors. Communication about preferences doesn't have to be boring
Unit focuses on money matters, shopping, and daily routines. Includes vocabulary about shops, extreme adjectives, and money verbs. Features reading about Dubai Mall and a blog about local life
Preferences are subjective evaluations of alternatives, typically expressed as "Agent A prefers X to Y". Preferences differ from factual concepts and are typically attributed to agents. Preferences are comparative, unlike monadic concepts like "good" or "is desired"
Unit focuses on deciding where to eat out. Students discuss restaurant preferences and service experiences. Grammar includes noun phrases and relative clauses. Vocabulary covers eating out, terrace dining, and vegetarian options
Scarcity is the fundamental problem of unlimited needs with limited resources. Economics analyzes how choices are made in the face of scarcity. Economic thinking compares costs with benefits to make rational choices
Author prefers tiling window managers but struggles with Wayland compatibility. Debian now makes Wayland default Gnome compositor. Hyprland strikes balance between visual aesthetics and performance