=^o0o^=
Strong words that support the topic or main idea is a good way to start off a paragraph. If you wanted to create a horror novel, you could start the paragraph with dark, intense, and intimidating words to best fit the mood.
Answer:
That was a more incredible film //////// or that was a more incredible film than the movie we watched yesterday.
Explanation:
Well, OBVIOUSLY, one of the girls is secretly able to fly. Let's call her... X.
The other girl, H, secretly hates X and wants to kill her. And they're playing Minecraft in H's room. H decided to kill X by pushing her off the room and having her land in this hole she dug and covered up with magical leaves that look very surreal.
H pretends to see something out the window and persuades X to climb onto the roof by climbing out the window to see what she's seeing.
X does so because she thinks that H is her best friend.
Decide what happens next :D
... Wait is there a rule against this being violent
hi
Landscape with the Fall of Icarus" is a poem by one of the foremost figures of 20th-century American poetry, William Carlos Williams, first published in Pictures from Brueghel and Other Poems in 1962. The poem is a work of ekphrasis—writing about a piece of visual art—and is part of a cycle of 10 poems inspired by the paintings of 16th-century artist Pieter Bruegel (or Brueghel) the Elder. Both Bruegel's painting and this poem depict the death of Icarus, the mythological figure who died after flying too close to the sun, in a rather unusual way: in both works, Icarus's death—caused by a fall from the sky after the wax holding his artificial wings together melted—is hardly a blip on the radar of the nearby townspeople, whose attention is turned instead toward the rhythms of daily life. Tragedy is thus presented as a question of perspective, something that depends on how close one is (literally and emotionally) to the event in question.