The topic sentence is a sentence that expresses the main idea of the paragraph in which it occurs. The subject of the topic sentence is (a) the topic itself and (b) the controlling idea. The sentence(s) in the paragraph that do not support or prove the controlling idea is the topic sentence; the topic sentence is the main focus, the controlling idea is your opinion about the topic {sentence}.
Question:What does the word rage mean when your angry.
Answer: Rage is a really intense anger. Some frustrated drivers let their emotions boil over into road rage when another car cuts them off, for example. If you're full of rage, you're full of anger — powerful, extreme, sometimes even violent anger.
Lexikon, which itself descends from Greek lexis (meaning "word" or "speech"), also gave us lexicon, which can mean either "dictionary" or "the vocabulary of a language, speaker, or subject."
1. five wonderful songs were sang by Coldplay.
2. a new book was given to me by Tom.
3. the taxi was stopped by my mum.
4. my cycle was stolen by somebody.
5. Romeo and Juliet were written by Shakespeare.
6. the race does not won by Charlie.
7. the t-shirt and shorts were worn by my brother.
8. two bottles of juice was drunk by Jon.
9. volleyball was played by teenagers.
10. the car mechanic's broken car 2as repaired by himself.
11. a new scooter would buyed by Susan.
12. the toys wood chosen by the kid.
13. this place would be visited by a lot of tourists.
14. the great deal would be signed by my manager.