A glass of water and a tray of ice.
One advantage would be ,to understand what a person you know is thinking about and why.
No. The grammatical structure is similar and some of the vocabulary is the same, or similar, but a Tshiluba speaker would not understand Swahili without studying it.
A data logger would work best when studying temperature changes over a 24-hour period. It can record temperature at regular intervals throughout the day and provide a comprehensive data set for analysis.
I would start by studying Computer Science.
Studying geography helps us understand the physical features and human interactions of different regions around the world.
Assuming you want to learn journalism in English, English would help you.
Studying the Talmud is an important practice for Jewish scholars to understand religious laws and ethics.
It would depend on the project at hand. Certain projects require that you be hands-on with them in order to study them properly. The projects that are more technical and analytical are better when studied on paper, hence online. Also, online has the ability to make interactive work during the studying, so that the person can better understand the subject or project.
One of the simplest statements they would understand is... "You need to know if your boss has paid you enough wages !"
It would depend on what you were studying for. If you have a general knowledge of the subject you are pursuing, it is best to study the materials that are known to be associated with it.
If science had no branches, it would simply be the study of all phenomena in the universe, and that would be too large a subject. By studying specific types of phenomena, rather than studying everything all at once, we can better manage the enquiry.
I think that would be the landscape. I would Google it.