Tag Archives: type

You find yourself in an unexpected survival situation – what type of environment would you thrive best in?

(Wilderness Survival)

Winter? Desert? Forest? Swamp? Mountains? Jungle? Deserted island in the ocean? What type of environment would your present personal skills and knowledge allow you to have the best chances of survival in?

What type of parenting style did she most likely receive?

I am creating a character – she is mature in the sense she has survival skills – cook, clean, etc. She is immature in the sense that she is naive, candid, very child-like and has a dependent personality. I am filling out a character trait chart, I am trying to figure out what her home life could have been to make her this way.

What do you learn in army vs marine boot camp?

whitch do you learn more stuff/skills in? Like compass or map reading or navigating or any type of survival? or first aid.Whitch has a better hand to hand combat?and whitch ones better trained

Carbonaceous Chondrites are believed to come from?

A) the core of a differentiated type M asteroid, now broken up.
B) deep space, far beyond the solar system, hence their very low density.
C) coal formed on Mars, then blown into space by asteroid impacts.
D) the crust of a differentiated C type asteroid, now broken up.
E) a broken up cometary nucleus, dark like Comet Halley’s nucleus.

thank you

Is it a good time to go with a particular adjustable rate mortgage?

With mortgage rates on the rise, is it prudent to pursue ANY type of adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) at this time? Or should home buyers be scrambling to lock in fixed rates?

In a simple world, I’d consider this question to be a slam dunk, until you factor in the various ARM options available on the market (1, 3, 5, 7, 10). The questions is essentially, is it possible to pick an ARM with a front-end period (where the rate stays fixed) that essentially “jumps” over the upcoming rate spike?

Naturally, we’re talking about rational home buyer options, NOT interest-free or 40-year loans.
For the record, the ARM options I was considering were 7/1 and 10/1. Because the first 7 (or 10) years are fixed, I would have assumed both to be a viable option. My thinking was that you’d basically be gambling that rates would be better in 7 or 10 years than they are right now. Is a decade of high rates really a possibility?