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Verbal communication

2 Nonverbal communication
3 Oral communication
4 Business communication
5 Written communication and its historical development
6 Effective communication
7 Barriers to effective human communication
o 7.1 Physical barriers
o 7.2 System design
o 7.3 Attitudinal barriers
o 7.4 Ambiguity of words/phrases
o 7.5 Individual linguistic ability
o 7.6 Physiological barriers
o 7.7 Cultural Differences
8 Nonhuman communication
o 8.1 Animal communication
o 8.2 Plants and fungi
o 8.3 Bacteria quorum sensing
9 Communication cycle
10 Communication noise
o 10.1 Environmental noise
o 10.2 Physiological-impairment noise
o 10.3 Semantic noise
o 10.4 Syntactical noise
o 10.5 Organizational noise
o 10.6 Cultural noise
o 10.7 Psychological noise
11 Communication as academic discipline
12 See also
13 References
14 Further reading
Verbal communication[edit]
Main article: Human communication
Effective verbal or spoken communication is dependant on a number of factors and cannot be
fully isolated from other important interpersonal skills such as non-verbal communication,
listening s


Communicate" redirects here. For other uses, see Communicate (disambiguation).
Communication (from Latin commnicre, meaning "to share"
[1]
) is the activity of
conveying information through the exchange of ideas, feelings, intentions, attitudes,
expectations, perceptions or commands, as by speech, non-verbal gestures,
writings, behavior and possibly by other means such as electromagnetic, chemical or physical
phenomena and smell. It is the meaningful exchange of information between two
or more participants (machines, organisms or their parts).
[2][3]

Communication requires a sender, a message, a medium and a recipient, although
the receiver does not have to be present or aware of the sender's intent to communicate at the
time of communication; thus communication can occur across vast distances in time and space.
Communication requires that the communicating parties share an area of communicative
commonality. The communication process is complete once the receiver understands the
sender's message.
[citation needed]

Communicating with others involves three primary steps:
[4]

Thought: First, information exists in the mind of the sender. This can be a concept, idea,
information, or feeling.
Encoding: Nex



2. creation of number ranges for vendor
master records

3. assignment of number ranges to
vendor account groups

4. Creation of tolerance group for
venders

5. Creation of vendor master
(display/change/block/unblock of vender master)

6. Posting of vendor transactions
(invoice posting, payment posting, credit memo)

7. Settings for advance payments to
parties (down payment) and clearing of down
payment against invoices (special GL transactions)

8. Posting of partial Payment &
Residual Payment

9. Creation of payment terms,

10. Creation of house banks and
account ids.

11. Creation of check lots and
maintenance of check register


Month-end closing: The work that is performed at the end of a posting period.
Functional area: An organizational unit in Accounting that classifies the expenses of an
organization by functions such as:
Administration
Sales and distribution
Marketing
Production
Research and development
Meaning of Accrual and Deferral
Accrual: An accrual occurs before a payment or receipt transaction. There are accruals for
expenses and for revenues. An accrual of an expense refers to the reporting of an expense


6. Posting of vendor transactions
(invoice posting, payment posting, credit memo)

7. Settings for advance payments to
parties (down payment) and clearing of down
payment against invoices (special GL transactions)

8. Posting of partial Payment &
Residual Payment

9. Creation of payment terms,

Introduction to SAP R/3

1. Introduction to ERP, and S.A.P

2. What is S.A.P / R/2-R/3 ARCHITECTURE

3. S.A.P Server landscape

4. OVER VIEW OF FICO

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