It is usually marked by letters. Such as ababbcc. That shows what lines rhyme with other lines. There's also AABB, ABAB (shwing that line a rhymes with line a, then line b rhymes with line b. It goes line a, line be, line a, line b.
~Silver
Answer:
U.S. News - The New York Times
Explanation:
(From newspapers and magazines)
There are numerous situations when reading articles from popular sources might serve to introduce you to a topic and how that topic is addressed in society. In most cases, articles from popular sources:
- are published for a general audience by journalists or professional authors
- written in a language that the broader public can understand
- They rarely contain a bibliography; instead, they are fact-checked throughout the editorial process of the magazine in which they appear.
- They do not presuppose prior knowledge of a subject area; as a result, they are frequently quite useful to read if you don't know a lot about your subject area yet.
- may include an argument, viewpoint, or analysis of a problem
apostrophy
it’s, let’s, she’s, they’re, I’ve, don’t
quotation marks
“Any further delay,” she said, “would result in a lawsuit.”
His latest story is titled “The Beginning of the End”; wouldn't a better title be “The End of the Beginning”?
paranthesis
When a parenthetical sentence exists on its own, the terminal punctuation goes inside the closing parenthesis.
She nonchalantly told us she would be spending her birthday in Venice (Italy, not California). (Unfortunately, we weren’t invited.)
have a goeed day
Answer: narrative essay
Explanation: I just did it