Answer:
It comes across to me that you come from a “hierarchy” culture where one would formally address an elder with respect. Here it is your uncle, whom I assume is an older gentleman, probably your parents’ older relative, living in a rural area with limited or no modern means of communication near by where he lives. Writing would be the next best thing. I would be happy to get a letter in the mail from my near and dear one who lives in another country.
I would start by saying,
Respected Uncle or Dearest Uncle….,
I hope you are doing well.
It has been a long time since we have seen each other. I remember my childhood when mummy and papa would bring us sometimes on our holidays to spend time with you. It was one of my best holdisays, and I want to visit again with mummy and my family so they too can have an experience of rural sunny life in ……..
I have not been out of the country (name your country) for some time now as I was tied down with some personal work at home and also my job kept me busy.
Now that I am able to free up some time, I thought about coming to visit you for a few weeks. First, mum was wanting to spend some quality time with you before she gets older and would not be able to travel later on alone; and second, since it is winter out here, this would be an opportune time to enjoy your sunny weather and be with you.
Uncle, I am mailing this letter to you today and we are all eagerly waiting to hear back from you soon, so we can make necessary travel arrangements.
Your nephew,
They are definitely not synonyms, that would mean they mean the same thing wich they definitely do not. They are antonyms.
The unstated assumption in this argument is "don´t eat meat" and if you do it "try to make it in small quantities".
Explanation: having a close look at the sentences, this is what is implicitly assumed-"eating large quantities of red meat is unhealthy" (do not consume meat, it can be harmfull for your health); in fact to be truly healthy, a vegetarian diet is preferable to one that includes meat. (if you really want to be healthy and follow a healthy diet, just concume veggies and get rid of meat).
Answer:
D
Explanation:
I'm able to eat a dinosaur describes your big hunger because you exaggerate because of the size of the dinosaur.
Answer:
Lunch Money
Life Lesson for Greg and Maura:
Making money is not a means to an end. Happiness in life does not depend on making more money per se. Happiness depends on giving out value. When you give out value, you will likely receive value in return. Sometimes, the value is monetary and some other times, it is pure bliss, i.e. the satisfaction one gets from knowing that he or she had been of tremendous help to another human being.
Importantly, creativity is a good skill which is quite emulatable. It involves thinking outside the box to marshal out solutions to people's problems with a win-win outcome.
Explanation:
"Lunch Money" was a children-targetted novel written by Andrew Clements in 2005. Its protagonist was Greg Kenton, a "shylock kind of kid" despised by Maura Shaw, who unfortunately duplicates Greg's comics.