Brainstorm list:
-you can kindly ask to be left alone
-you can try to talk your problem out with someone
- Do something that makes you feel happy like a hobbie or anything else to get your mind off of things.
Answer:
“The air on the is by turns foggy and cool and salty and warm. There are moss roses and fragrant stands of eucalyptus. You might call it beautiful, but you are a detainee, not a vacationer, and you are very far from any place that you could call home.” This quote from the story, The Writing on the Wall, helps develop the central idea of the story by explaining how the outside of America seemed inviting and perfect but on the inside, it is crucial and lonely. Immigrants were “detainees” and it would be a hard adjustment. I can see how immigrants would turn to poetry to release their emotions.
Answer:
To show how schools suffers from having summer vacation
<span>Richie had felt a mad, exhilarating kind of energy growing in the room. . . . He thought he recognized the feeling from his childhood, when he felt it everyday and had come to take it merely as a matter of course. He supposed that, if he had ever thought about that deep-running aquifer of energy as a kid (he could not recall that he ever had), he would have simply dismissed it as a fact of life, something that would always be there, like the color of his eyes . . . .
Well, that hadn't turned out to be true. The energy you drew on so extravagantly when you were a kid, the energy you thought would never exhaust itself—that slipped away somewhere between eighteen and twenty-four, to be replaced by something much duller . . . purpose, maybe, or goals . . . .
Source: King, Stephen. It. New York: Penguin, 1987. Print.</span>
( ) = prepositional phrase
{ } = object of preposition
1. ( in {Oregon}, ) it can be quite rainy ( along the {coast}. )
2. Everyone (from the {city} and {suburbs}) should vacation (in the {countryside}) (during the summer {months}.)
3. I have never seen a wild bear outside.
This sentence does not contain any prepositional phrases, regardless of the word, "outside," because nothing comes after it. For example, if said, "outside of Kentucky," then it'd be a prepositional phrase, Kentucky being the object of preposition.
4. Johnson ran (over the {hill}) (near the grocery {store}) (on his {way}) (to {school.})