The last one is the answer,
Language that is not intended to be taken literally
Answer:
Dear Marianne,
Hey Mary, how are you doing? How's your family? Hope you're staying protected from the coronavirus?
I was just checking on you but I decided to use this opportunity to tell you about the book I recently read. It's called “Geek Girl: Head Over Heels." Basically, I came across the series a couple of weeks ago at my school library and immediately got interested.
I adore many things about the series; especially the cover page which is of the face of the geek girl, I find it intriguing. Each story has between 300 and 500 pages. It took me almost 2 weeks to complete my first one. The main character of the series is a teenage girl named Harriet Manners who works as a model travelling to different countries, whilst keeping her new social life and ever complicated schedules in place. The author, Holly Smale, also happened to be a model at that age, which inspired her to create the series. I love how she used her life experience in fiction. The last book known as "Geek Girl: Forever Geek" was recently published and I'm looking forward to reading it.
Hope you visit soon,
Soore...
Explanation:
Hope this helps.
The Secchi disk, as created in 1865 by Angelo Secchi, is a plain white, circular disk 30 cm (12 in) in diameter used to measure water transparency or turbidity in bodies of water. The disc is mounted on a pole or line, and lowered slowly down in the water. The depth at which the disk is no longer visible is taken as a measure of the transparency of the water. This measure is known as the Secchi depth and is related to water turbidity. Since its invention, the disk has also been used in a modified, smaller 20 cm (8 in) diameter, black and white design to measure freshwater transparency.
Could you go into details or post a picture