<span>six less than: Think of this as "minus 6" or -6.
number: Think of this as "n."
one-third of a number: Think of this "as one-third of n" or (1/3)n
Putting that together:
(1/3) n - 6 ---> finally 1/3n-6
for six less than one-third a number</span>
<span> Ralph did not share his bike so, his family called him selfish, this made Ralph think about running away.</span>
Answer:
Hi A counterclaim addresses a readers or audience's disagreement with the speaker's argument. The speaker's goal with a counterclaim isn't to anger their reader or listener but a knowledge that everyone might not agree with their argument but to continue to provide reasons why a listener should accept their argument.
Hope this helps :)
You use the semicolon with an independent clause when you join two of the independent clauses in a sentence without using a conjunction. So basically the semicolon replaces the conjunction when you're combining two independent clauses.