Dear Brother,
I hope you are well. I am good and am now working as a Teacher in Central America. I actually like working down here and the pace of life is very different. You should come down and visit me here sometime, I would really enjoy that. I know you are busy with your family, but feel free to bring all of them with you, if you come to visit. I trust you are well and please write back to me. It would be good to stay in touch. I miss you a lot brother and best wishes from me. Take care.
Sincerely,
Michael
Answer:
i would think it would mean you wanted to be around that person at all times
Explanation:
Answer:
Good clear answers and obviously more knowledgeable than me, but i would like to add that when I taught English as a foreign language I would, once students had achieved a sufficient level, have introduced the idea of two types of English side-by-side, one of a perhaps more ‘educated’ and certainly more Latinate, and another more ‘homely’ which echoes the more Anglo-Saxon tradition, so regal/kingly, maternal/motherly. I have come across translations from other languages that are clearly from one tradition and from the other, and if a choice is to be made I far prefer the Anglo-Saxon, even though it’s not so posh.
And yes, I did encourage students to be Anglo-Saxons.
I could also add that I have a notion that Norman children were brought up very largely by Anglo-Saxon servants, and when they wandered into the kitchens looking for something to eat they would have used the language. By the time the courtier Geoffrey Chaucer was writing I’m sure Normans were cheerfully bilingual and getting to like English.
Explanation:
The <span>Synonyms for
all are everyone everybody each person every person
out is elsewhere gone not here absent
</span>
Answer:
Each change of speaker equals a new paragraph.
Explanation:
punctuation is placed on the inside of quotations
quotations surround the speakers words but not the taglines
spoken words should be capitalized and punctuated.