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Hi, my name is Emma Harris. I am 17 years old. I was born on the 8th June 1993. I live in Ireland, just in a small village outside of Naas in Co. Kildare. I have a learning disability so I attend a school in Newbridge called St. Marks. I got the idea to write the book after my best friend and I were playing a game in my back garden. It took me three years to write all four books which I then decided to put into one book.
A creature, forgotten by the Magic, lost by Time, left alone to find its way. Making its way through two worlds, the search leads to more mystery as it reaches for a meaning to its existence. At first called a creature, then a child and a man. Eventually called an Unknown: Trolin
Perry Shepherd, Earl of Brentwood, presents himself to Society as a bit of a fribble; carefree, fairly indolent, and bored to flinders by anything remotely political. But appearances can deceive, because scratch that polished surface and the real Perry appears, an invaluable and rather ruthless covert asset to England during the late war with Bonaparte. Perry ignores the reappearance of Princess Caroline, consort of the new King George IV…until his wily uncle orders him to ferret out information that would make it possible for the new king to divorce his unwanted, blowsy, and rather audacious spouse before he is forced to crown her as his Queen. Left with no options, Perry decides the way ...
Gwydion is an enchanting work of fiction that weaves a spellbinding tale within the fantasy genre. The journey begins when a young princess, unknowingly bestowed with a magical stone on her birthday, embarks on an extraordinary adventure. Alongside her spirited brother and a band of other courageous children, they escape to a realm known as Gwydion. This alternate world is a place of giant birds, mysterious wizardry, and a ruler with a complex relationship with the Princess's presence. Meet Poppi, a beautiful teenager with a heart of gold, who safeguards her wayward brother and harnesses the magic of the stone to aid her companions. Then, there's Christian, a prince yearning for a life as a ...
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Red Eagle’s Children presents the legal proceedings in an inheritance dispute that serves as an unexpected window on the intersection of two cultural and legal systems: Creek Indian and Euro-American. Case 1299: Weatherford vs. Weatherford et al. appeared in the Chancery Court of Mobile in 1846 when William “Red Eagle” Weatherford’s son by the Indian woman Supalamy sued his half siblings fathered by Weatherford with two other Creek women, Polly Moniac and Mary Stiggins, for a greater share of Weatherford’s estate. While the court recognized William Jr. as the son of William Sr., he nevertheless lost his petition for inheritance due to the lack of legal evidence concerning the marri...
Measuring the degree of association between random variables is a task inherent in many practical applications such as risk management and financial modeling. Well-known measures like Spearman's rho and Kendall's tau can be expressed in terms of the underlying copula only, hence, being independent of the underlying univariate marginal distributions. Opposed to these classical measures of association, mutual information, which is derived from information theory, constitutes a fundamentally different approach of measuring association. Although this measure is likewise independent of the univariate margins, it is not a functional of the copula but of the corresponding copula density. Besides th...