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the car has not been checked by us yet
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Hi there!
My favorite sport is <em>-insert team sport-</em> I first knew about this sport because <em>-insert sibiling or friend-</em> played it before me. I wanted to follow in their footsteps when I was younger, so I started to play -<em>insert sport- </em> as well. I usually practice this sport about four times a week, but it is sometimes different depending on the week. This is my favorite sport because it is fun to play, it is a team sport, and because it teaches the players teamwork, which I think is very important in every day life. My favorite position on this sport is -insert position-. I like this because <em>-</em><em>give why-. </em>I would reccomend this sport to people, becuase it teaches you a good life lesson, while you are having fun.
try to change the words a little bit to make then 1. sound more like how you ususally write, and 2. so you dont get marked off for plagerism.
Let me know if you want a different sport or anything, this is just the only sport i play haha
Have a good day! :)
It would be a) to place above.
A summary includes more detail than a paraphrase.
When you paraphrase you do not include details or references, but when writing a summary you should.
The rhyme scheme is ABAB up until the last two lines, which are CC. Rhyme scheme signifies which lines rhyme with each other, depending on the last word in each line. The As correspond with each other, the Bs correspond with each other, and so on.
The main idea of the poem is that one should not to give up pursuing a woman if at first she doesn't seem interested, because when she has finally been won over, her love will last forever. In other words, be patient, because a woman who is not easily wooed will provide the longest form of love.
The poet uses the "metaphor" of burning an oak. A metaphor is a comparison between two seemingly unlike things (in this case a woman/her love and an oak tree) without using the words "like" or "as" (which would make the comparison a simile).
The poet uses the metaphor of a wound to represent how deep love can go ("Deep is the wound, that dints the parts entire With chaste affects, that naught but death can sever").