Lets see! You can do a story of a man that is tying to get his gardening done all by himself and then he finds a snake in his grass and hes trying to get it out but it wont leave. He tries all of these ways to get the snake out but they dont work and then a young man tries to help him but he wont allow him to help. Until eventually the man tries to pick up the snake and then gets bit he then looks around at his yard and then he see's that if he had just have listened to the young man his yard wouldnt have been ruined. You can do something like that! Just add some dialoge and some ideas and you'll be good!
Zadie Smith had always wanted to dig deeper in her father's war experience, but she never had enough courage to ask him, and neither did he.
One day, Zadie finds herself visiting an American poet friend in Normandy. And when they were visiting the beach there, she realized that it might be the place where, 59 years before, her father landed upon. So, she mentions this to her friend, who was also interested in war history of the area, and as a consequence, Zadie is interrogated by this friend. But in the end, Zadie relaizes she knows nothing about his father's war experence.
After this event, she returns home and feels determined to start interviewing his father.
The unequal access to resources and differences in technological progress, including the development of social structures, education and infrastructure, alter the outcome of natural and agricultural land sustainability and social policies.
A “nor” usually follows a “neither” when they're used in the same sentence (1). For example, you might say: I like neither hot dogs nor ketchup. You can also use “nor” if you're talking about more than two items, but you have to repeat “nor” after each element