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2025台灣帽款趨勢:從EMIS新品看「奶茶色系」、「復古運動風」

Posted by 台灣出行與美食資訊 on February 23, 2025 at 7:47pm 0 Comments

2025年的台灣帽款趨勢中,「奶茶色系」和「復古運動風」成為了兩大熱門元素。而來自韓國的潮牌EMIS,憑藉其新品設計,完美契合了這兩大趨勢,成為許多人關注的焦點。以下我們將從EMIS的新品出發,深入探討這兩大趨勢如何影響台灣的帽款市場。

1. 奶茶色系的流行

奶茶色系作為一種溫柔且百搭的色調,近年來在時尚界備受青睞。這種色系不僅適合各種膚色,還能為整體造型增添一份柔和與溫暖。Emis 帽子的新品中,多款帽款都採用了奶茶色系,如奶茶色的棒球帽和漁夫帽,這些帽子不僅適合日常穿搭,還能在秋冬季節為造型增添一份溫馨感。
搭配建議:…
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حبك علم قلبي يكره انه يحب بقى شايف كلو بيخون

Posted by Mido Ram on February 23, 2025 at 4:50pm 0 Comments

اوعى يا قلبي توقع في الحب اتعلم ماتنجرح مش كل مرة بتنجح مابدي ينصاب قلبي بجرح ما اتحمله. روحي كانت عايشة على الوهم ولما فقت لقيت انك كنت حتة من الخيال.

المصدر: كلمات عصر الكذبة محمد نور

Pet Cancer Detection: Progress with Beginning A diagnosis in addition to Treatment

Posted by Micheal Jorden on February 23, 2025 at 2:50pm 0 Comments

Cancers is amongst the foremost factors that cause demise with house animals, in particular with more aged dogs. Seeing that pet owners are more mindful of this pitfalls, the demand intended for beginning detection in addition to useful treatment plans hasn't also been far more significant. Innovations with professional drugs include concluded in major upgrades with the way cancers is usually diagnosed with house animals, featuring traumas sooner involvement, superior results, in addition to… Continue

Volkswagen and former boss face US lawsuit over Dieselgate

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) claims the firm misled investors by issuing billions of dollars worth of bonds and securities, without disclosing that it had cheated emissions tests.To get more business news, you can visit shine news official website.
Volkswagen's former chief executive Martin Winterkorn is also being sued.
The company said it would contest the SEC lawsuit vigorously.
VW first admitted in September 2015 that it had used illegal software to cheat US emissions tests. But between April 2014 and May 2015 the carmaker sold $13bn (£10bn) of bonds and securities to US investors, at a time when executives were already aware that illegal software had been installed to manipulate emissions tests, according to the SEC's suit.
The SEC said that as a result, Volkswagen "reaped hundreds of millions of dollars in benefit by issuing the securities at more attractive rates for the company".
When the scandal was uncovered, VW's share price sank nearly 40%.
The firm "repeatedly lied to and misled United States investors, consumers, and regulators as part of an illegal scheme to sell its purportedly 'clean diesel' cars and billions of dollars of corporate bonds and other securities in the United States," the SEC added.
Volkswagen carsImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
The suit seeks to bar Mr Winterkorn, who resigned when the scandal became public, from serving as an officer or director of a public US company. He has been charged in the US with conspiring to cover up the emissions cheating scandal. However Germany does not extradite its own citizens.We're not yet through the diesel scandal, it will probably still take years... and it's a burden for us." That is what VW's chief executive Herbert Diess had to say when I spoke to him at the Geneva Motor Show last week.
We were discussing the raft of legal cases which VW is still facing around the world - and to which it is still having to dedicate substantial resources
It has already paid out more than $30bn in the US alone, in fines and other penalties, and to buy back affected vehicles.
The SEC's lawsuit shows that the US authorities are not prepared to let the company off the hook just yet.
It remains under pressure in Europe too - where it is still facing a waveof consumer lawsuits over its refusal to pay compensation.
Ironically, as Mr Diess acknowledged, the scandal forced Volkswagen down a path which may help it become a leader in more environmentally-friendly technologies.
Presentational grey line
Volkswagen has already agreed to pay more than $25bn in the US over the emissions scandal including criminal and civil fines.
The firm said in a statement the SEC complaint was "legally and factually flawed".
It said the securities in question had been sold "only to sophisticated investors who were not harmed and received all payments of interest and principal in full and on time" and said that Mr Winterkorn had played no part in the sales of those securities.
The carmaker is already defending its actions in court in Germany, where investors are pursuing €9.26bn (£8.2bn) in damages, arguing the company should have come clean earlier about the emissions tests cheating. That case is expected to last until later this year.

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