Dear ______,
I was just writing this to express my gratitude and appreciation! Thank you so much for everything you do! It really means a lot to me and I don't know how I can ever repay you! I am thankful for how you ______, ________, and ______.
Then when you get to the body paragraphs you could repeat one reason you were thankful for them and explain more deeply in each paragraph. Make sure to use a lot of positive adjectives to make it more wordy! Then close of in a closing paragraph. For example....
Again thanks so much for everything! Your kindness means everything to me and everyone around you!
I wish you all the best and more,
_____________
The way an author writes (includes punctuation/capitalization, stanza and line length, figurative language, and sound devices)idiom<span>an expression that has a meaning different from the meaning of its individual words (type of fig. lang)</span>
Answer:
1= dynamic
3= flat
Explanation:
I read this book last year
I think it's right
hope this helps :)
Answer:
The soldier is pointing out that:
a) It is often conflicting.
Explanation:
If people who are fighting against you open fire and kill you, we can say you were killed by enemy fire, since it was the enemy who shot. Thus, friendly fire means being killed by your friends, not by your enemy. However, <u>when the soldier says, "I don't know why they call it friendly fire if it kills you," he is paying more attention to the literal meaning of "friendly". "Friendly" can refer to people who are nice and kind. But it can also refer to something that is not harmful. If a product does not harm nature, we say it is environment-friendly. From this perspective, it does seem weird to call "friendly fire" something that is harmful, that can kill you. Thus, to this soldier, terminology used at war seems conflicting.</u>