The most probable <span>question which readers should ask before reading the "More than Flavorful" section is:
</span><span>Other than adding flavor, what else can herbs do?
</span>
<span>Aside from the main purpose of using herbs which is to add flavor, answers to this question will address some other uses it can provide.</span>
Answer:
if he doesn't give you a ROSE then he'll surely LOSE
Explanation:
ROSE and LOSE different vowel sounds share same constant
Answer:
1. Include hooks and details to keep the reader wanting more and more of your content.
2. Use sensory details in your statement.
Example of sensory details in statement: I place a bite of the baked mac and cheese in my mouth and a bomb of flavor bursted in my mouth. Gooey, melty, warm cheese with pepper on top felt like heaven as it hit my tongue.
Reading about the mac and cheese might make you want some of it right then and there on the spot. That's how you know you made the reader want more and put good sensory details.
Explanation:
I hope this helps! :D
(What I think is the) answer:
How someone talks of something through their perspective.
Explanation:
With a colleague (workplace mate) you'd talk from a professional standpoint but if you were to talk with a friend you'd speak more casually about stuff.
Hello. This question is incompetent. The full question is:
A poor substitute for food was this hide, just as it had been stripped from the starved horses of the cattlemen six months back. In its frozen state it was more like strips of galvanized iron, and when a dog wrestled it into his stomach it thawed into thin and innutritious leathery strings and into a mass of short hair, irritating and indigestible.
The sensory details in this excerpt help the reader understand how cold and harsh the weather is. How long food rations can last on the trail. How desperate the dogs are to eat. How poorly treated the horses are.
Answer:
How desperate the dogs are to eat.
Explanation:
The text manages to promote sensory details that show how the dogs were so hungry that they were content to eat anything that could satisfy the overwhelming and desperate hunger they felt. The hunger was so great that the dogs were able to eat extremely hard, frozen, tasteless and nutrient-free strips of leather, because that was more comfortable than the hunger they felt.