It’s not *supposed* to happen, but of course you can find instances where it does.
Some judges like to hand out longer sentences. Some are<span> just corrupt</span>.
It’s also possible that having the victim survive can work against you as they can now testify against you. An emotional plea from a victim can get a judge pretty worked up.
I don’t remember where I heard it, but a lawyer once advised a client that, “If you run someone over, be sure to back over them again and finish the job. Their family will get less money for a corpse than for a disability.”
You need a thesis statement in your intro paragraph. "Even" in the first sentence is capitalized even though it is after a comma. Rather than just giving background, try to relate the background info to examples in the novel.
To be honest, I'm not entirely sure if it would be considered a complete sentence or not. Technically speaking it has a subject and a verb, but I don't know if it has a complete thought. I think it should read: The clouds looked dark.
Answer:
hope my answer helps you
Explanation:
it the right answer which you have selected because its writen the example showiing socratic teaching type so its correct