The definition of a good descriptive paragraph is a paragraph that appeals to the five senses: sight, sound, touch, smell, and hearing. It lets the reader into the author's world and allows them to experience the fun the author is having writing the article. Taking all the above into consideration, I think the best topic for a descriptive paragraph is A. Describing a yoga position. My assumption is also based on the fact that the author also enjoys yoga.
Begin the citation<span> with the title of the specific </span>entry<span>, followed by the year of publication in round brackets</span>
yes u wont get into trouble
<span>The sentence is built around the simple subject “dad” and simple predicate “gave.” It also contains both a direct object “lunches” and indirect object “us.”
</span><span>Unfazed by the morning frenzy before school is a prepositional phrase modifying gave. or dad. or something. but you don't need to know that and i'm stupid so let's move on.
Before we left is also a prepositional phrase. I'm still stupid so let's move on.
The subject is dad, verb is gave, and the direct object is lunches because it's what dad gave, it's the receiver of the action.
The indirect object is us because it's whom received th</span>e verb. Or something. I'm still stupid.
Explanation:
Exigence an event or circumstance that engenders rhetoric; the requirement is the one that starts the "loop" of the debate on rhetoric about a specific subject. Purpose: the desired results of (implicitly or explicitly) rhetorical speech defined by the rhetoric.