The most appropriate thesis sentence would be: "As we got older our lives went in different directions, but we still keep up on social media" (D).
In a good thesis sentence, your reader should:
- identify a key question or idea,
- be able to understand how you are going to develop this idea in the paper,
- and be given a hint of what your conclusion will be.
This sentence (D) is raising a key question: how did the friendship evolve as you got older? It is also providing a direction regarding the way you are going to approach the development (chronologically). Finally, it mentions the conclusion, or the answer to the question, in a few words: "we still keep up on social media."
A seminal work is a creative and original piece that, representing an idea, opinion or important issue, later will have the role of inspiring or contributing to the development of other works, serving as a source, as a base for new creations, a reference. We may use various seminal works to build a solid argument on a topic; For constructing fictional situations that represent the idea in them; For designing new thoughts about the same issue.
<em> The right answer is D. a work that is the basis for important ideas and that influences later works
</em>
Answer:
Formal language
Informal language
When you are communicating with someone that you don’t know very well
Situations that are more relaxed and that involve people that you know well or know each other well
Business emails
Some business correspondence
Academic writing/ articles
In everyday conversations
Professional academic situations
Personal emails
Presentations
Social media
Reports
Advertising
Public tenders
Spontaneous speech
Official documents
Text messages
Talking to superiors
Talking to peers
Legal documents
Some meeting minutes
Public speaking (speeches, lectures, etc)
Networking or socialising with clients
Job interviews
Team meetings
Explanation:
informal is with friends or family or someone you know
personally
formal is with people who you know
personally like office or school etc.
How many words want to make paragraphs?