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    picture‚ sunglasses‚ watermelon‚ puddle‚ school bus‚ and lawnmower are words that connect with people with his or her memories in some way. An instant word can bring memories back into his or her reality. Their memories can be so vivid that their dreams may feel like present day. The stream of consciousness can take one word and recreate your whole past. In the poem‚ "Piano"‚ written by D.H. Lawrence‚ the narrator is affected by the word piano. A woman sings softly to him while he reminiscences about his

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    Sample IB Written Task

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    Sample Written Task 1 Criterion A The rationale seems to be a few words over the 200-300 word limit‚ clocking in at 303 words total; not that bad but it needs to stay within the word limit. The rationale also doesn’t give a clear cut purpose as to why he is doing this. He does give some background information about why exactly he chose this exact topic for his written task‚ but he doesn’t tell us what exactly he’s trying to do and what the task is about. I get the feeling that the writer of

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    Kite Runner

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    interesting way to open the novel? Language The language used in chapter one is very mysterious and invites a reader to continue further into the book and the use of pathetic fallacy in the first sentence sets the mood for the rest of the chapter. Words such as crouching and peeking suggest the character is somewhere they shouldn’t be. As well as this‚ the phrase about the ‘past clawing its way out’ gives the impression that what happened there is a monstrous thing that the character has locked away

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    The Sentry

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    and just how wet they were. The word ’waterfalls’ suggests an abundance of water‚ which is constantly flowing and never-ending. It gives us the idea that they have no control over the water‚ as a waterfall is near enough unstoppable. Also‚ because the word is plural‚ we can then imagine the quantity of water. There was so much water that the mud turned to ’slime’‚ so we can imagine just how dirty the trenches are‚ with a thick slime forever flowing around them. The word ’guttering’ also helps make the

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    francis bacon

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    conjunction: 1. it supplies the logical connection between parts of the text. It marks the way one sentence follows the other and how the text as a whole is moving forward. 2. Lexical cohesion: an individual word that refers back to another word in the development of the text. Lexical set: words of similar meaning that form a stitch work through the text and can be set out as a set. general commanding operations‚ Indians killing ‚war‚ Indians‚ negotiate‚ General Cook‚ command‚ escort‚ ammunition

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    root words and their definitions. These words play a vital role in Biology because many scientific terms are based on these words. Because these root words are Greek or Latin in origin‚ their meanings have remained consistent throughout time. By becoming familiar with root words and their definitions you can determine general meanings of many terms by simply applying these root word definitions. For example‚ the root word "inter" means between. Knowing this you could easily define the word "intercellular"

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    What Is a Paragraph? WRIT 1044 What Is a Paragraph? Paragraphs are clusters of information supporting an essay’s main point (in works of fiction‚ they advance the action or develop the characters). Paragraphs need to be clearly focused‚ well developed‚ organized‚ coherent‚ and a manageable length – generally 5-8 sentences. See page 81 in your textbook! How Do You Begin? Each paragraph should begin with what is called a topic sentence – a one-sentence summary of the argument

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    Osama Bin Laden

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    Unit 2 Changes in Essential Questions My World Unit Overview It has been said that the only constant in the world is change. In Unit 1 you explored how you have changed; in this unit‚ you will explore how the world around you changes. You will identify the challenges and choices that you have made in meeting these changes. Through fiction‚ nonfiction‚ print‚ and nonprint texts‚ you will see how others have dealt with the choices and the opportunities that change can present. ? How

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    rhetorical technique

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    Rhetorical Techniques1 Definitions & Examples for Students 1. Repetition: the purposeful replication of words or phrases in order to make a point. Example: “It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us…that government of the people‚ by the people‚ for the people‚ shall not perish from the earth.” Abraham Lincoln 2. Simile: an explicit comparison between two things using like or as. Example: “Life is like an onion: You peel it off one layer at a time‚

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    " the main character has just lost a loved one and feels such devastation that cannot be put into words‚ but could only be described as "not" something. She feels such loss at her loved one’s burial‚ that his "burial reminded [her] of [hers]". He has been a huge part of her life‚ so when he dies‚ that part of her dies also‚ and is buried with him. She cannot put the feeling of devastation into words‚ for if pain can be described‚ it has a mortal limit and is bearable. The pain of the character in

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