Answer:
singular is like brother or sister plural is like brothers or sisters
I'm like 90% sure it is d sorry if I get it wrong for you!
Answer:
The story is taken from Berlin City of Germany. The main characters are Dr. Emil Braun, his wife Mrs. Braun and a sick woman Elda.
One day after Christmas of 1903, in the evening, Dr. Emil Brown of Germany was trying to make notes of the difficult surgical operation he did that day. He was trying to have dinner at the same time. But due to his tiredness he could not do either of them and soon dozed off.
Then a conversation about a house call between a small girl and his wife at his door woke him up. The child was saying that her mother was very ill and was dying soon. The doctor came to the door, talked to the girl. The girl of six or seven was thin and wearing cotton dress and shabby shoes. Dr. Emil became ready with his coat, hat and little black box despite his wife’s disagreement.
It was raining lightly. On the way the doctor tried to catch up the girl to ask some questions but the girl kept the distance between them and stopped for a short time only at the corners to make sure that the doctor was following.
The girl took him through the poorest part of Berlin, the section of the city around the hospital where he worked. Finally, the girl led him to an old house. They climbed the stairs through the dark hallway. The doctor tried to catch the girl on the stairs also but failed again. However, he felt energetic to climb up the stairs as if he was young. On the fifth floor the girl led the doctor to a room where woman was lying on a single bed. The girl thanked the doctor as he moved in and softly shut the door from outside. The elderly doctor easily recognized the woman. She worked as maintenance staff in the same hospital three years before. The doctor easily found out that the woman was suffering from pneumonia and gave her some medicine. He asked her if she had gone to live with her brother in country. The woman replied that she had gone but she had come back three months ago after her child’s death. They talked about the woman’s daughter confusingly. Then the woman showed her daughter’s shawl and shoes to the doctor in the corner of the room. The doctor examined them carefully. The doctor touched them and felt that they were wet. He was astonished to this. Then the woman said that there might have been some confusion about the girl who called the doctor. The doctor agreed. The woman said that she had been thinking about him and he came which was strange. The woman slept with her half sentence and the doctor left the room.
Answer:
As a sample, use this⤵
My god's name will be Jirais (Ge-ray-is). Jirais has shoulder-length black hair. Jirais has one gray eye and one dark green eye. He wears old-fashioned Victorian clothing, as he is the god of poison and likes to be relevant to the times and human perception of poison in general, as to why he wears clothing similar to plague doctors. His symbol looks like a biohazard symbol with triangles at each end of every line. His animal is a snake, which curls upon his neck like a scarf and is dark green. His origin is in Ancient Greece, as he was a demigod. He was born to Almadaya, a beautiful princess of an island called Elmandris. Her father was King Derithis, a man who would defy the gods to satisfy his greed. One day, King Derithis met with his advisor, Miso. Miso was cunning and bold but he was always available to help King Derithis and his family. King Derithis always looked for ways to increase his wealth, so, on this day he asked Miso to look for a man for his daughter to marry. Miso agreed and searched far and wide for a husband for the young princess. Alas, Miso came back to the island empty-handed and asked the king to lower his wealth expectations for his potential future son in law. King Derithis, in a fit of rage, tried to kill Miso with his sword. As soon as the sword neared Miso's neck, time stopped for the two of them. Miso then grabbed the sword's blade with his very hands and flipped the sword so that he will hold its handle. He then cut off the limbs of King Derithis, one by one, to prove a point. While his life was draining out of him, King Derithis heard Miso laughing, with princess Almadaya. The only problem was that Miso was not Miso, Miso was the Olympian God Hermes, the god of thieves. After the death of King Derithis, Almadaya found herself pregnant but abandoned. She swore to get revenge, whether it would be in her lifetime or not. Nearing the birth of Jirais, Almadaya went to a witch in the far mountains of Bodicia. She told the witch her story and the witch gave her a potion and told Almadaya to go to sleep. Almadaya went to sleep and never woke up. The which then took Almadaya's son out of the womb and raised him as her own, teaching him the world of poison and raising him to be a warrior to claim Olympus as his own. The witch could create a potion to make Jirais a full-blooded god, she just needed the blood of an Olympian. On Jirais' 21st birthday, she summoned the Titans of the beginning of time to aid Jirais in claiming Olympus. Having won the battle, she created the potion and gave it to Jirais, before turning to ash and fading away herself. Jirais honors his "mother" by becoming the god of poison and still staying relevant in the modern world today by changing his associations and appearances when it comes to poison.