Pleasantly calm or peaceful; unruffled; tranquil; serenely quiet or <span>undisturbed i got this from dictionary.com</span>
That the people of England were unprepared for an attack --Apex
Answer:
Some of the items on my shopping list, chanterelle mushrooms, white asparagus, and eel, were impossible to find.
Explanation:
Commas in this case, generally your going to add commas in a place where you would take a breath. This wouldn't be colons because thats more of an indication of a place that you could also fit comma-and. Parenthesis clearly don't fit. The only other risk is dashes because you could in theory do "Some of the items on my shopping list-chanterelle mushrooms, white asparagus, and eel-were impossible to find. " But that doesn't read as smoothly so its the less safe of the two choices
A sestet is a six-line stanza of poetry. It can be any six-line stanza—one that is, itself, a whole poem, or one that makes up a part of a longer poem. ... Sestets don't have to have a meter or rhyme scheme, but the sestet of a sonnet typically uses iambic pentameter and has a specific rhyme scheme.
(This is help so you can do it on your own)
It's the fallacy of stating or thinking that if 'B' came <em>after</em> 'A', then 'A' <em>must have</em> <em>caused</em> 'B'.
Here's a ridiculous example:
Every day at 4:00 in the morning, I rub this gold ring that I always carry
in my pocket, and every day, within two or three hours, the sun rises.
This has been happening regularly, for almost five years now, so I know
that I can totally rely on it..
I'm getting ready to write to my Congressman and tell him that if he does not
send me five million dollars within a week, I will not rub the ring for a week, and
that will cause havoc with farming, transportation, and weather, since the sun
will not rise for a week.