Answer:
woke up early and took a walk on the beach
Explanation:
Answer:
jayfeather friend me
Explanation:Wet your hands with clean, running water (warm or cold), turn off the tap, and apply soap.
Lather your hands by rubbing them together with the soap. ...
Scrub your hands for at least 20 seconds. ...
Rinse your hands well under clean, running water.Germs from unwashed hands can be transferred to other objects, like handrails, table tops, or toys, and then transferred to another person's hands. Removing germs through handwashing therefore helps prevent diarrhea and respiratory infections and may even help prevent skin and eye infections.
The answer to this question would be METHAPHOR.
Solution 1: The miller is employed at a mill and is worried that his anti-milling family & friend(s) might disapprove with his career choice(s).
Solution 2: The anti-miller is boycotting mills with his anti-milling family, friend(s) and/or coworker(s). This demonstrates his obvious lack of care for pro-miller’s opinion(s) of him while showing the opposite to the anti-millers. Consequently, his strong opposition towards mills won’t allow him to work at one and he’s now unemployed in a coincidentally mill-dominant city.
Solution 3: The miller is employed at a mill and is therefore highly regarded by his pro-milling family/friend(s)/coworkers.
Solution 4: The closeted anti-miller has no choice but to work at a mill due to his lack of self respect and untimely need for funds. The anti-miller’s choice(s) have begun to bring him a great deal of negativity from those whom know of his hidden anti-mill views. He’s unconfident in himself now that he’s essentially living a lie. His coworkers unknowingly, and rightfully so, add to his turmoil with their pro-mill commentary.
Solution 5: Everything and anything having to do with mills and milling is wiped from existence in it’s entirety. (This solution leaves you with no mill-related problem to have ever occurred and doesn’t give chance to any mill-related problem to happen.)
There are two ways to do this.
The first way is the American English way. You would use double quotation marks (“…”) for a quotation and single quotation marks (´…´) for the quotation inside the first quotation.
The second way is the British English way. It works in the opposite way than the American English way: single quotation marks for a quotation and double quotation marks for the quotation inside the first quotation.