Well...it might be that old "supply and demand" factor. As one example: a corporation/rancher/farmer might have the "demand" and the immigrant might have the "supply."
Number 2 is your best bet
Answer:
<em><u>d. important; appropriate</u></em>
Explanation:
<em>Think about the speech that MLK made.</em>
<em>When he said "I have a dream", he was talking to a whole lot of people, right? And all those people were inspired by that speech, and it allowed them to move forward in their lives.</em>
<em><u>When you make a speech, it has to be made so that people would be fulfilled by it and should make them feel more encouraged. You would want to make it so that others will believe YOU and that it will make them feel moved, making them more amused by your story. </u></em>
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<em><u>Now, if you were to make a speech about something irrelevant, like fights and stuff, people wouldn't really want to read anything like that cause it would make them want to do it as well.</u></em>
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Answer:
The concept paper and how could writer expand the concept of the paper is described below in details.
Explanation:
The Concept Paper. All investigation projects require a concept paper: a short synopsis that explains to the scholar what the project is, why it is necessary, and how it will be brought out. Even if no one else ever understands it, the concept paper supports a researcher point gaps in her or his project that might later show disastrous.
Answer:
If you want the honest feedback, I got you. I was really good, but I have a few suggestions to make it sound more "official":
- Italicize sounds (i.e. change "Thud!" to <em>Thud. </em>in the second paragraph)
- Make sure formatting is reasonable and consistent: "1 month later" is too big, the title should be bigger and "Beanbag" is incorrect (it's bean bag)
- Suspense would work very well in this story. I wouldn't reveal who the speaker is until the last paragraph or even last sentence. To do this, you can touch more on the emotional aspects of this story in the introduction and body paragraphs (no naming names, places, things, etc.) Make it abstract as you can to build up to the answers: Who is talking? What happened to them? Why do they feel this way? Things like that.
- Stop being so repetitive with words like "demon" (maybe substitute for "little devil" or "menace")
- I see the humorous aspect of this story, but I would make sure to not include too many spelling and grammar mistakes.
Sorry if my suggestions are a little too intense, but I can tell you are a good writer and can easily improve in these areas! Please let me know if this helps!