What is the difference between a tourist and an excursionist?
Answer:
A tourist goes to a specific location to see specific things. Like a visit to Paris to see the Louvre. Also, a tourist will usually stay overnight and sleep in the location he is visiting.
An excursion is a short trip, just for pleasure. Like a hike in the woods or a walk in the park. Also, an excursionist will usually go back to his/her town, hotel or residence that it is different from the visited destination, when sleep/rest is needed.
A tourist is one that makes a tour for pleasure or culture.
An excursionist is a person who goes on an excursion.
An excursion is a usually short journey made for pleasure; an outing.
Tourist A person who is traveling or visiting a place for pleasure.
"traveling to and staying in places outside their usual environment for not more than one consecutive year for leisure, business and other purposes".[1]
Tourism has become a popular global leisure activity. The Inter-Relationships between Leisure, Recreation, Tourism, and Hospitalityhe inter-relationships between leisure, recreation, tourism, and hospitality For many people the debate over terminology and definitions is uninteresting, unimportant, unnecessary and/or impossible to agree upon. Therefore, they argue, why bother? There are a number of reasons to pursue such a debate (Mieczkowski, 1990). First, any field that aspires to be scholarly must develop strict criteria that are generally accepted in order that communication between all interested parties can go on. The procedures of scientific method dictate that theory is dependent upon measurement and definition must precede measurement (Franklin, 2003). Second, the establishment of generally accepted standards and definitions is necessary for any longitudinal research. The definition of 'visitor' in Samoa changed when different individuals managed the Office of Tourism (Mieczkowski, 1990). Third, clear definitions are necessary for legal/administrative reasons related to such things as differentiating between different types of tourists.
It depends on how long the paragraphs are, and on whether or not the paper is doublespaced. Two to five pages, perhaps.
just over one and a halve typed pages
6 paragraphs
it depends
On average, a one-ounce letter has about 6-8 pages of paper. The number of pages can vary depending on the paper thickness and size, but this is a common estimate.
A typical pamphlet may have 4, 8, 12, or 16 pages, which are created by folding a single sheet of paper.
Not Meant to Be has 8 pages.
It has 132 pages and 8 unnumbered pages.
8
Mrs. Medwin has 8 pages.
If David can type a 50-page paper in 8 hours, his typing rate is 50 pages / 8 hours = 6.25 pages per hour. In the case of David and Andy typing together, their combined rate is 50 pages / 6 hours = 8.33 pages per hour. Since David's rate is 6.25 pages per hour, Andy's rate is the difference: 8.33 - 6.25 = 2.08 pages per hour. Therefore, Andy would take 50 pages / 2.08 pages per hour = 24 hours to type a 50-page paper by himself.
8 or 5
It has 448 pages.
A 2000-word paper is typically around 4 pages when double-spaced and using a standard font size and margins. However, this can vary depending on formatting requirements and the specific font and spacing used.
8 Billion
introduction, body paragraph 1, body paragraph 2, body paragraph 3, and conclusion. Each body paragraph that you write should be at least 8 sentences long. good luck! =)