Answer: New authors are prone to their own styles, however, most authors write in present-tense and third-person when publishing their first novel.
Explanation:
'However' is the interruption. Hope this helps. Do you need a better sentence?
Are you supposed to do it in past tense?
Then it would be:
13. Fit
14. Ran
15. Fed
<span>+Use a logical format and wide margins, clean type and clear headings
+Selectively apply bold and italic typeface that help guide the reader's eye
<span>+Use bullets to call attention to important points (i.e. accomplishments)
+</span></span><span>Focus on what you did in the job, NOT what your job was there's a difference
+Include a one or two top line job description first, then list your accomplishments
+For each point ask yourself, What was the benefit of having done what I did?Accomplishments should be unique to you, not just a list of what someone else did
+Avoid using the generic descriptions of the jobs you originally applied for or held</span>
Well I'll just hit it kinda vaguely to hit it all at once. So imagine you do something nice for a person, like buy them a gift or a present, that will cause a fondness and a bond between that person and you, which in turn establishes a relationship. Pretty much, in order to cause a relationship, you have to establish a positive bond with the person or some kind of being. The effect of having a relationship would be something like a deeper trust in others, improvement of the same or other relationships, increased happiness and so on. (I'm just assuming that these are all positive relationships.) So, an example would be like, you see a nice girl/guy, you talk to them and become good friends which would result in establishing a relationship. After establishing a relationship, your relationship would become more intimate and you would become better friends, or maybe even become partners. You can even get a negative relationship by creating a negative relation, then as a result it would be a toxic relationship. The toxic relationship would then result in it being harmful.
Folly is act of foolishness
Reprove is correcting the mistakes
Accost is approach in a challenging manner
Prattle is talking meaningless/ or foolishness
Recompense is payback
Feigned is pretend
Peevish is ill tempered
Mollification is appeasement