To whom it may concern,
I am writing this as an example of a letter. Make sure you double space between your greeting and the beginning to your letter. Anyways yeah just write "To whom it may concern," with the comma and double space:) super simple.
Sincerely,
A Brainly user
Answer:
In your career as a student, you’ll encounter many different kinds of writing assignments, each with its own requirements. One of the most common is the comparison/contrast essay, in which you focus on the ways in which certain things or ideas—usually two of them—are similar to (this is the comparison) and/or different from (this is the contrast) one another. By assigning such essays, your instructors are encouraging you to make connections between texts or ideas, engage in critical thinking, and go beyond mere description or summary to generate interesting analysis: when you reflect on similarities and differences, you gain a deeper understanding of the items you are comparing, their relationship to each other, and what is most important about them.
I believe a circular reasoning would be someone stating relevant reasoning of a topic for example for atheists do you believe in god the circular reasonings are all similar: god doesn't exist (because) there is no evidence to god (because) any evidence for god isn't evidence shaped like circular (circle of reasoning) Atheists have similar reasoning as they don't believe in god hope this helps :)
<span>All points of view happen inside the narrator of the
story’s minds. A point of view is the narrator of the whole story. There are
three types of point of views: first, second and third point of view. In this
question, it could be the first person point of view, is when one of the characters
is the narrator and usually describes things using ‘I’ or third person point of
view is someone not included in the story and can be objective third person –
narrator only shares the facts and no emotions; limited third person – includes
feeling and emotions and omniscient third person – narrator partly reveals both
the emotions and facts.</span>