According to experts, the Secretary of the Department of Finance in the Philippines is Cesar V. Purisma who is currently serving his second term.
The correct punctuation would be "counselors' secretary" to indicate that the secretary works for multiple counselors. If you are referring to a secretary who works for one counselor, it would be "counselor's secretary."
Use of the preposition 'to' and 'for' would depend on the context of the sentence. Example: The secretary to Mr. Jones will make an appointment for you. Mr. Jones is the secretary for the parents' committee. Another variation is: Tom Vilsack is Secretary of the US Department of Agriculture.
No, "secretary" is not capitalized in minutes unless it is part of a specific title before a person's name (e.g., Secretary Smith).
No, the possessive form for the singular noun secretary is secretary's.Example: The secretary's report is published quarterly.The possessive form for the plural noun secretaries is secretaries'.Example: The secretaries' jobs are by political appointment.
The likely word here is correctly spelled "secretary" (assistant). When used for a member of the President's Cabinet, it is capitalized Secretary.
Secretary Cesar V. Purisima is the current Secretary of the Philippine Department of Finance (DOF).
DOF ASA was created in 1981.
DOF Subsea's population is 2,007.
The population of DOF Subsea is 1,200.
:dof:
1873 on January 30, 1873
they are pangit
In photography, the acronym DOF refers to Depth of Field. This applies mainly in digital photography, and is how focused the lenses are on one area or place.
The ulanzi dof adapter is compatible with a wide range of lenses, including Canon EF, Nikon F, Sony E, and Micro Four Thirds.
[General Answer - applies to DSLR & 35mm] The smaller the f-stop value, the smaller the depth of field. In typical "snap-shot" working distances, f2.8 - f4 typically provide small DoF and nicely blurred backgrounds.BUT - there are a couple of 'Gotchas'(Examples below assume 35mm film or full frame DSLR)Focal length effects DoF 24mm lens @ f/4 working 10 ft from subject = DoF 20.9 ft35mm lens @ f/4 working 10 ft from subject = DoF 6.47 ft50mm lens @ f/4 working 10 ft from subject = DoF 2.94 ft100mm lens @ f/4 working 10 ft from subject = DoF .71 ftSubject distance effects DoF 50mm lens @ f/4 working 20 ft from subject - DoF 12.7 ft50mm lens @ f/4 working 10 ft from subject - DoF 2.94 ft50mm lens @ f/4 working 5 ft from subject - DoF .71 ft50mm lens @ f/4 working 2 ft from subject - DoF .11 ftAnother DoF 'Gotcha'The bigger the image sensor, the longer your focal length.The smaller the image sensor, the shorter your focal length. A typical point a shoot camera will have an actual focal length of 5mm - 35mmThat provides the same effective viewing angle as a 20mm - 140mm zoom on a full frame DSLRBecause of the smaller sensor, you must shoot at 24mm instead of 100mm (See 24mm vs 100mm above)
It affects DOF (Depth of field)(Bigger aperture, narrower DOF). And it affects light too. Aperture is measured in f/stops. Such as f/2.8 f/1.8 f/22 f/11.
Today, all pronounciable three-letter abbreviations usually mean several different things. In my "world", DOF stands for Degrees-Of-Freedom. Used for instance to describe how a factory robot can manipulate a work item.