Here is an email you could write to your friend about this topic:
Hey, I've noticed you've been trying to get into this school for a while and I just wanted you to know a few things so you're not lost like I was the first day. First of all, this school offers so much in terms of extra curiculars. I myself am doing computer design and beginers HMTL, but they offer lots of thing that I think you'd like. I know you're a fan of sports which is cool because some of the facilities they offer are Soccer, Basketball, Badminton and there are a couple more, but I don't think you'd really be interested in it.
when writing an Email to your friend, you can use shortened language and personalized words that you otherwise wouldn't on a formal email. One of those words I used was "hey"
You can also personalize your email to that specific person, which I showed buy saying "and there are a couple more, but I don't think you'd really be interested in it."
Answer:
I think the answer is D (compound)
I'm confused... are you asking if this is the correct answer?
Answer:
It's like any other college campus. There's the school campus, which consists mainly of classrooms, the gym, the music building, the library, the tennis court, the swimming pool, etc; then there's the residential campus, which consists mainly of halls of residence for about 1,200 students, plus some other residential blocks like for professors, plus hotels for special guests, plus the student canteen (staff restaurant) and student laundry (staff gym).
Explanation:
haha
<span /><span><span><span>
The speaker is burying himself in books, in "many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore," in order to find "surcease of sorrow" over the death of "a rare and radiant maiden whom the angels named Lenore." The whole poem is haunted by the death of this maiden. The speaker wonders if there is an afterlife in which he might hope to meet her again--but the raven replies to all such questions with the single word "Nevermore." In an early stanza of the poem, the speaker throws open the shutter and peers out into the darkness, hoping against hope that the tapping he kept hearing was made by the spirit of Lenore. "The only word there uttered was the whispered word 'Lenore.'" But there is no response. The raven with its single-word vocabulary symbolizes the painful truth the speaker cannot escape--that he has lost his loved one forever.
</span></span></span>