Why do you both spell "Irish" that way?
I have an HNC in Government, Economics and Commerce and my take away was that there are some fundamental rules but beyond that no two economists think the same way.
Quote from: eamonn on January 28, 2024, 12:38:05 PMWhy do you both spell "Irish" that way?It's a portmanteau to appeal to the kids. It means In Real Life Irish.
You must cube a mean Rubik.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on January 28, 2024, 09:49:59 AMQuote from: Bad English on January 28, 2024, 05:12:38 AMI have O and A Level Economics, I still don't have a clue about Villa's wage bill, or FFP but I could explain why people still attempt to obtain mythical expensive 'pints of beer' at half-time in the Trinity concourse even though it is nigh on impossible to obtain one.My A levels were in Politics, History and Economics. I feel uniquely qualified to explain wage bills, but also both the politics and history behind them. Politics, Geography and Economics (plus General Studies) for me. So wage bills and where the new ground should be, and a load of completely random shit.
Quote from: Bad English on January 28, 2024, 05:12:38 AMI have O and A Level Economics, I still don't have a clue about Villa's wage bill, or FFP but I could explain why people still attempt to obtain mythical expensive 'pints of beer' at half-time in the Trinity concourse even though it is nigh on impossible to obtain one.My A levels were in Politics, History and Economics. I feel uniquely qualified to explain wage bills, but also both the politics and history behind them.
I have O and A Level Economics, I still don't have a clue about Villa's wage bill, or FFP but I could explain why people still attempt to obtain mythical expensive 'pints of beer' at half-time in the Trinity concourse even though it is nigh on impossible to obtain one.