Monday, April 3, 2017

Youtube daily report Apr 3 2017

Immigration, Réfugiés et Citoyenneté Canada.

L'examen de la citoyenneté canadienne.

Félicitations!

Vous avez été invité à passer l'examen de la citoyenneté canadienne.

Vous êtes en voie de devenir un citoyen canadien.

Cet examen sert à évaluer vos connaissances sur le Canada et sur les privilèges et les

responsabilités que vous confère la citoyenneté canadienne.

Cette brève vidéo vous montrera à quoi vous attendre avant, pendant et après l'examen.

Avant l'examen

Vous vous penchez depuis un certain temps sur le Guide d'étude pour

l'examen de la citoyenneté du Canada.

Tout ce que vous devez connaître pour réussir l'examen se trouve dans ce guide.

Découvrez-le en ligne ou commandez-en un exemplaire qui vous sera livré par la poste.

Des versions audio, en braille et en gros caractères sont également disponibles.

Vous recevrez une lettre de convocation environ deux semaines avant la date de l'examen.

La lettre indiquera la date, l'heure et l'endroit de l'examen, et précisera quels

documents vous devrez apporter.

Prévoyez deux heures pour tout le processus.

Vous devrez vous rendre à l'examen par vos propres moyens et prendre des dispositions

pour faire garder vos enfants, le cas échéant.

Si vous passez l'examen avec d'autres membres de votre famille, soyez avisés que vous ne

serez pas assis ensemble pendant l'examen.

Si vous ne pouvez pas vous présenter à l'examen au jour convenu, ou ...

... si vous avez des besoins particuliers, par exemple un texte en braille ou en gros

caractères, ou encore un accès pour fauteuil roulant, veuillez communiquer avec votre

bureau local d'Immigration, Réfugiés et Citoyenneté Canada

dès que vous aurez reçu votre lettre de convocation.

Si vous ne pouvez pas vous rendre à l'examen au jour convenu à cause d'une urgence,

contactez le bureau local dans les trente jours pour fournir une explication raisonnable.

Le jour de l'examen

Le jour de l'examen, avant de quitter la maison, relisez votre convocation attentivement

pour vous assurer d'apporter le nécessaire.

Apportez les documents originaux que vous aviez soumis lors de votre demande.

Arrivez quinze minutes avant l'heure indiquée sur votre convocation.

À votre arrivée, il y aura d'autres personnes qui attendent déjà pour s'inscrire à

l'examen.

Ne vous en faites pas!

L'examen ne débutera que lorsque tout le monde aura été inscrit.

À l'appel de votre nom, on contrôlera vos documents une dernière fois avant l'examen.

L'examen

Vous disposerez de trente minutes pour faire l'examen

dans la langue officielle de votre choix.

Les questions sont basées sur le guide d'étude officiel.

L'examen comprend vingt questions.

Il vous faut quinze réponses exactes pour le réussir.

Certaines questions présentent des choix de réponses multiples.

Elles présentent quatre réponses plausibles.

Mais une seule de ces réponses est exacte.

Vous devez encercler la bonne réponse sur votre feuille.

Certaines questions vous donneront le choix entre Vrai ou Faux.

Encore une fois, il vous faut encercler la bonne réponse sur votre feuille.

Certaines feuilles ont une apparence différente.

Dans ces cas, vous devez noircir la bonne réponse.

Vos résultats vous seront communiqués le jour même, en personne,

à la fin de la séance d'examen.

Après l'examen

Si vous réussissez l'examen et que vous satisfaites à toutes les autres exigences de la

citoyenneté, comme la grande majorité des candidats,

... vous recevrez une invitation à la cérémonie d'assermentation dans les quatre à six

semaines plus tard.

Cette invitation précisera ce que vous devez savoir au sujet de la cérémonie de

citoyenneté.

Malheureusement, certaines personnes ne réussissent pas l'examen du premier coup.

Si vous êtes de celles-là, vous aurez l'occasion de vous reprendre.

Vous recevrez une nouvelle convocation dans quatre à huit semaines.

Si vous ne réussissez toujours pas, vous devrez passer une entrevue

avec un agent de la citoyenneté.

N'oubliez pas, l'examen a pour but d'évaluer vos connaissances sur le Canada

et sur les privilèges et les responsabilités que vous confère la citoyenneté.

La plupart des gens le réussissent du premier coup.

Préparez-vous bien à l'avance.

Assurez-vous d'apporter tous les documents exigés.

Faites de votre mieux.

Bonne chance!

For more infomation >> Ce que vous devez savoir avant l'exam de citoyenneté - Duration: 5:03.

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El Crac - El gran comiat - Duration: 56:04.

For more infomation >> El Crac - El gran comiat - Duration: 56:04.

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Broken Bones - theJunieBird - VEDA day THREE - Duration: 10:38.

Hey folks. Happy VEDA, I'm so glad to see

you today and today I wanted to talk a

little bit about the many, many bones that

I have broken. ~Hey Rachel from later on

checking in here, and I do wind up going

into somewhat graphic details for this

video, nothing like crazy there are no

visuals of like blood or anything like that.

I don't think I ever was like bleeding

in any of these scenarios, but if you're

a little bit squeamish maybe skip this

video and I won't hold it against you.

Just wanted to say that.~ I think it's

interesting, I've actually broken six

bones in my lifetime and for a really

long time it was five bones, and then I

broke like, one more in the last couple

of years. Apparently I am very clumsy and

I am just a mess. I'm slightly better now.

So the first time I broke a bone, I was

in kindergarten, so I was like six years

old and I broke this arm I actually

broke it at the elbow, and this is the

first one is by far the best story of me

breaking a bone, so I will of course tell

it to you guys right here. I was

pretending to be a gymnastics princess.

Because this is what you do when you're

six and princesses wear high heels. So I

had these plastic like high-heeled shoes

that were in the dress-up box that I was

wearing. The edge of my bed has like a

little rail that was probably like an

inch and a half wide, and that was my

balance beam. So I was practicing the

balance beam, on the edge of my bed,

wearing high-heeled shoes, and you can

probably see where this

is going. I missed-- the heel missed a step

and so I leaned back on it and just kept

going I like fell, I fell into a rocking

chair that was in the middle of my room

and shouldn't have been because I hadn't

cleaned my room in, probably like a week

or so, and some things never change. I had

a cast all the way up to here. It was

hot pink. Everybody in my class signed it

and it was like, it was probably like, six

months to a year before I could do the

monkey bars again, and that was the most

offensive part of it to me. So, the next time

I broke a bone, I was in the fifth grade,

I had just started going to a new school,

and there were three other girls in my

class named Rachel. That year they all

broke their wrist, like going down the

hall and just like, 'Oh there's Rachel, she

broke her wrist. There's Rachel, she broke

her wrist. There's Rachel, she's next', just

like, not in a mean way, just in like a

this is too much of a coincidence for

you to get away with not breaking

anything. I was a friend's house and we

were practicing trying to do backflips

on her trampoline, and I landed weird.

So I landed on my back, I bounced up, and

I hit *BAM* I don't know if you could see

that, I hit my nose with my knee. And um,

we weren't really sure that it was

broken, so we didn't go to the emergency

room, we didn't go to a doctor right away,

but a week later, when it was still

like a little bit crooked and weird,

we're just like, 'Okay, yeah, it's probably

something that we should get looked at',

they even I even had like a little tiny

nose-sized cast

and it was the funniest thing. The

next year, in sixth grade, I broke my

middle finger, on this hand so. That one

was really no big deal, I just was

playing with a basketball. I wasn't

playing basketball, I was playing with a

basketball, and threw it up into the air

and it landed weirdly on my one finger.

Yeah, I knew almost immediately, I'm just

like yeah that's probably broken, but

also it's not broken very badly. So I was

at a neighbor's house, and I didn't want

them to feel responsible because they

weren't, because it was all my fault and

so I just kind of like kept smiling and

chatting and then I went home and I was

just like, "Hey mom, I think I kind of

broke my finger," she's just like, "Okay

cool, that's fine." Bless my parents for

for putting- putting up with all this.

So, in seventh grade I broke my wrist again.

I broke this wrist this time, it was just

the wrist, it wasn't the like elbow or

anything like that. And that one I broke--

This one I broke rock climbing. So I

was actually bouldering, I did not have a

mat underneath me and I forget if it was--

like, the ground is still pretty cushion-y,

so it's not-- it probably shouldn't have

broken, but it did anyway, and that one

like, it broke and you could tell

immediately that it was broken. There was

no question it was just like a, "Yep,

that's a very unnatural angle, and that's

broken and now we're going to the

emergency room." The next year in eighth

grade like I said, there were four years

straight where I was going to the

Emergency Room every single year and in eighth

grade I had a rather minor sprain of my

wrist again and this time it was because

I had fallen while snowboarding, and I

like, fell back and caught myself on my

wrist and it was just like, 'Yes that-

that's probably broken,' that was another

one where it just like it didn't hurt a

whole lot, but I also knew pretty much

immediately that like, 'Yep, that's broken,

that's like a- a minor sprain and we

need to go to the emergency room.'

Honestly, there is actually, so I don't

even have this written down in my

outline, but I'm remembering now that my

sophomore year of high school, so when I

was in 10th grade, I broke my finger

again. I think it was my ring finger

this time, but they like kind of taped

these two fingers together and I'm just

like remembering, like having the cast on,

but honestly I cannot for the life of me

remember how I broke it. But I am like

really clearly remembering having- having

the cast on in my Humanities class. Me

breaking bones is just like, such a minor

thing that I can't even remember why or

how I broke a thing. Yep. That's my

life. When I was a junior in college I

went to visit my uncle in Colorado, and

we went rock climbing. We went um... we

went whitewater rafting. It was like

summer in between, I think it was...

Yeah, it was summer between sophomore and

junior year of college, and we just had a

lot of fun.

We were hanging out and as we were hiking

back to the car one day, I like stubb- I

stubbed my toe really really badly on a

big boulder. And we were so close to the

car, I remember it's just like I like

stubbed it really bad and I was just

like screaming. And I'm just like "I'm

really tired, but we can't like, we can't

waste any time on this, like let's just

keep walking!" I didn't even go to the

emergency room for this one, my uncle is

trained as a nurse, he's not working as

a nurse, but he was trained as one so he

took a look at it and he was just like,

"Yeah that's broken, but if we bring you

to the emergency room the only thing

they're going to do is tape that toe to

the toe next to it." And it was like my

pinky toe too, so he's just like, "So

really what you should do is just, like,

stretch it out because like stretching

it out will reset it for you, and um, tape

it to the toe next to it and just keep

living your life." So that's what I did.

And I we actually went whitewater

rafting after I broke my toe, so that

was cool. So those are the stories of all

the breaks and sprains that I have

suffered so far in my life. It's been fun

and I'm going to go now. Happy VEDA, I

hope you get a chance to do something

that you love today, and as usual I will

see you tomorrow. Bye guys.

For more infomation >> Broken Bones - theJunieBird - VEDA day THREE - Duration: 10:38.

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Jenny Vergara, lauréate de la bourse à la persévérance et à la réussite de la FEP - Duration: 1:12.

For more infomation >> Jenny Vergara, lauréate de la bourse à la persévérance et à la réussite de la FEP - Duration: 1:12.

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What Causes Dimples? - Duration: 3:53.

Dimples!

We tend to think of them as cute or attractive…

I mean, can you picture Joseph Gordon Levitt without them?!

But considering how coveted these facial features can be,

we know surprisingly little about them.

Cheek dimples aren't exactly at the top of many researchers' priority lists, which

I suppose is how it should be.

But we're not even quite sure what they are.

And if you think they're inherited, well, yes… but not necessarily the way you think.

We do know that they're fairly common.

Studies in different populations have found that anywhere between 10 and 40 percent of

people have dimples.

As for why you, your friend, or yes, Adam Levine, have these adorable features, anatomical

studies suggest that it has to do with a variation in a muscle of the face

called the zygomaticus major.

This funny-sounding muscle is indeed that -- it helps us smile!

It connects the corners of the mouth to the cheek bones just under the eyes.

When we're feeling happy, or just faking it, that muscle contracts, pulling the corners

of the mouth upward into a big grin.

But sometimes, instead of staying as one, continuous muscle all the way from the cheekbone,

the zygomaticus major splits into two, and attaches in two spots, with one part connecting

to the usual spot just above the corner of the mouth,

and the other attaching slightly below.

This variation is called a bifid.

When this happens, the lower section also sometimes connects to some cheek skin.

So, when bifid zygomaticus major muscles contract, it's thought that the lower part pulls on

that skin, causing it to buckle, creating a dimple.

But it's hard to say for sure that the bifid muscle is the reason people have dimples,

because the anatomical studies that have looked into this question were done on cadavers,

and they're not exactly doing a bunch of smiling at that point.

Dimples are also somewhat confusing when it comes to how they might be inherited.

They're often touted as an example of a dominant genetic trait, where a child has

a 50 to 100% chance of having dimples if one of their parents does.

Sometimes, dimples are even used in classrooms when teaching about genetics.

Few studies have actually been done on the heritability of dimples.

One study, done in Russia in the 1990s, looked at 75 families for a variety of physical traits,

including the presence of cheek dimples.

The results suggested that dimples were a dominant trait controlled by one gene, but

researchers also noticed that inheritance changed

depending on whether a person was male or female.

More recently, the gene-profiling company 23andMe did its own investigation into dimple

genetics, which found that dimples were associated with nine different genes.

Complicating matters even more is the fact that dimples can come and go over time.

In some people, dimples only show up in adulthood.

While in others, those cute divots only show up when they're children.

So, dimples could still be largely genetic, but these patterns suggest multiple genes

could be involved, and that environmental factors matter, too.

For instance, whether dimples show up could be related to the amount of fat in the face,

or the elasticity in the skin, both of which could be tied to age or sex.

And of course, these days not everyone who you think has dimples has them naturally.

Some people get dimple piercings to get that look, or resort to cosmetic surgery.

Even though we don't have a great sense of what a natural dimple is, plastic surgeons

have figured out how to make them in the operating room.

One procedure attaches skin to the underlying muscles.

But instead of using zygomaticus major, surgeons tether skin to the buccinator muscle, which

is one of the key cheek muscles that helps you chew food.

Alas, this technique isn't always permanent, and the dimples can fade.

But if you really want the dimples, at least you've got options.

This episode of SciShow was made possible by our patrons on Patreon.

If you want to help support this show, you can do that at patreon.com/scishow.

There's also some cool stuff you can get there.

And if you want to support us just by subscribing, I encourage you to do that at youtube.com/scishow.

Or there's a button right under the video.

For more infomation >> What Causes Dimples? - Duration: 3:53.

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Réponse au défi du Président: Maddie Godfrey - Duration: 1:15.

For more infomation >> Réponse au défi du Président: Maddie Godfrey - Duration: 1:15.

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A toi de jouer #6 - Agent secret - Duration: 2:39.

For more infomation >> A toi de jouer #6 - Agent secret - Duration: 2:39.

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「Google マップ」の "現在地を共有" で相互に現在地の共有を行う方法 - Duration: 2:29.

Way to do each other You are here sharing "Share your location" in the "Google Maps"

Hello everyone

This time, we will each other to introduce a method for sharing your location in the "You are here to share" of the "Google Maps"

In 2017 the end of March to be able to share your location in real-time that have been added to the "Google Maps" "share your location" feature,

Its current location in addition to the ability to share to other users, you can also use functions to help, such as waiting to share each other You are here

There is a need to allow the share of each of the current location information while function is a matter of course to share your location to this mutual

Please be assured that one of the user is not a function that can be known to force the current position of the other party

Way to do each other You are here sharing "Share your location" in the "Google Maps" is the first one of the users to start sharing their own You are here

And the other of the user specified in the current location sharing, open the "Google Maps" from such e-mail that has been sent from the user you share your location,

Touch the user's icon you share your location, and set the period in which the share to turn on the switch of "Share your location" is displayed

This becomes active user of the icon you are sharing your location with each other, during the period you have specified will be held to share each other You are here

This sharing of mutual location, it is the point that it can be set on the other user-side across time and first time period set by the user performing the location sharing

You do not need to set the same period.

Is the "Google Maps" in the "Share your location" feature is a new feature was not likely until now

Also that it can use its functions in the "Google Maps" of the most powerful map service has become a big advantage

Please by all means try to reference

Above, it was the introduction of a method for performing each other You are here sharing "Share your location" in the "Google Maps"

For more infomation >> 「Google マップ」の "現在地を共有" で相互に現在地の共有を行う方法 - Duration: 2:29.

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Shaving Your "Bikini Region" While Driving, and Other Florida Stories | Humorist Dave Berry - Duration: 4:22.

There are a lot of factors that make Florida weird.

It is not like any other state that I know of, in the sense that there is no Florida.

I mean, there is Miami where I live, which is Latin America.

I mean, it is!

You spend any time in Miami, you will discover that not only is it Latin America, but it's

more and more Latin America every day.

If you go south into the Keys, it's in the '60s.

If you go west—Naples—it's Ohio.

If you go north to Boca, it's Long Island.

If you go to Orlando it's like Russian limousine drivers driving tourists from everywhere in

the world around.

And if you go much north of that it becomes Georgia and Alabama.

So it is really not one state, it has no coherence at all, and I think less so as the time goes

by.

It's a vacation spot, so you have people coming down there to have fun, people not feeling

necessarily in a serious mood.

It's a very transient state, so you have a lot of people, again, who don't feel rooted

there, but are just there because it's convenient or the weather is nice or whatever.

And it's a pretty corrupt state (I mean our government).

We had a lot of corruption in Florida.

And it's convenient to all kinds of borders, so it's very easy to get there from the Caribbean,

from Latin America, whatever; so if you wanted to smuggle something, Florida is a great place

to start.

So the result of this is: it's just this kind of very loose, very non-structured, very non-traditional

state where anything feels like it could happen.

It's kind of like: if you made Las Vegas much bigger and with less controls not to the efficiency

of the casinos and the Las Vegas Police Department; just kind of a big area where people feel

they can do things.

So people come from everywhere to party, to do whatever, to commit criminal acts.

And the weather is warm, so you can always be outside and there's always a party going

on somewhere.

It's just conducive to weird things happening.

My argument has been for a long time that it's not so much Floridians are weird (and

I consider myself to be one when I've been there 30 years), it's people who come to Florida:

we are like the Ellis Island for weird, stupid people—they come to Florida to commit to

stupid acts.

One example I like to use that got international publicity: A woman was arrested driving south

on the Overseas Highway from Miami to Key West, she had an accident because she was

shaving her bikini region while driving.

She actually had outsourced the steering to her passenger.

She was in a hurry to see her boyfriend in Key West.

This was all according to the police report.

So she decided rather than to pull over to the side of the road to shave her bikini region,

she'd keep going and outsource the steering to her passenger, who was (as it happened,

and this is why it's a Florida story) her ex-husband.

So they're driving south 40 miles an hour; she's shaving but not looking at the road

just operating the accelerator; he's steering.

What could possibly go wrong?

Anyway, the car in front of them slows down; they slam into it; there's an accident.

International news, all Florida stories are.

Can you believe it?

This woman who was shaving her bikini area while driving?

The woman was from Indiana.

That's the key.

She was shaving her Hoosier, which is I think were that term comes from.

Florida gets the blame for that, but it's actually somebody who came to Florida.

And that's so often the case if somebody decides he want to pleasure himself into a stuff animal

in Walmart, that person—wherever he is—he's going to go to Florida to commit that act,

which is why we have so many people doing just so many weird things naked with reptiles.

We have a lot of reptiles also.

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