In an adversarial system (common law), as in effect in the U.S. and England, the judge functions as an impartial referee, mainly ensuring correct procedure, while the prosecution and the defense present their case to a jury, often selected from common citizens.
<em>Hope</em><em> </em><em>it</em><em> </em><em>helps</em><em> </em><em>uh</em>
It is a simile
The sentence is comparing the arms to helicopters blades using *like
Answer:
I'll be including three sources here, please try to do the other two yourself.
For MLA format:
- Begin with the author's name, formatted as [Last, First], followed by a period.
- Then, in italics, list the book name, followed by a period.
- Next, cite the publisher, then place a comma, followed by the publishing year.
- Place a comma after the publishing year and state the specific pages you are citing, if there are specific pages.
- Place citations in alphabetical order by last name.
Sample citation page with three citations:
Works Cited Page (centered)
Beals, Melba P. <em>Warriors Don't Cry</em>. Pocket Books, 1994.
Poe, Marshall. <em>Little Rock Nine</em>. Aladdin Paperbacks, 2008.
Tougas, Shelley. <em>Little Rock Girl 1957: How a Photograph Changed the Fight for Integration</em>. Compass Point Books, 2012.
FYI, I dont reccomend putting your full name anywhere on the internet, and in the top right hand corner we can all see your name. Also to answer this Question I reccomend going to Shmoop.com and looking up "The Hunger Games Chapter 21 Summary" or just going on Google and searching "Chapter 21 summary of The Hunger Games" and it'll be the first link to pop up. Remember to put it in your own word and source it, DO NOT write it word for word, because that would be Plagiarism; and Plagiarism is illegal.
Well, you can’t hear me so the comma helps and puts a little space in reading the same sentence, a momentary pause. I’m from Texas; I’m not a Cowboy (semi colon is used for a cause and effect sentence). Wow! That’s so cool! Exclamation marks add emphasis