As you identify and evaluate research sources, you must make accurate notes of information you think might be useful in your essay. There are many ways to take notes—from jotting down single words or phrases to photocopying entire articles. (For instruction on note-taking, see “Taking Good Research Notes” in How to Research Your Topic on this Web Site.)
There are three ways of incorporating source information into your own writing: summary, paraphrase, and direct quotation. When you summarize or paraphrase, you restate in your own words the idea(s) of another speaker or writer. When you quote, you reproduce the exact words of another speaker or writer.
Last night -yes
With his friends -no
And won -no
Exciting and challenging -no
Hello. You did not present the text to which this question refers, which makes it impossible for it to be answered. In the meantime I will help you in the best possible way.
A textual evidence is a sentence that proves an affirmation presented in the text. This sentence justifies and shows that the statement presented is real and true.
It is only possible to point out the textual evidence of the physical and mental effects that Lyddie is facing, through reading the text, but we can consider that a hard work of a long journey would promote a great physical and mental fatigue in Lyddie, making her feel overloaded and even promoting symptoms such as pain, stress, discouragement and fatigue. In that case, you should find, in your text, evidence of these symptoms and the occurrence of these, or similar symptoms, in Lyddie.
Native Americans would usually use stories to illustrate their culture. They would use oral tradition, which their ancestors had passed on from one generation to another. The oral tradition tells how the Native Americans see the Westerners, which are not often found in books.
Hoped I helped!
Charles and Marcela Howard felt scared/overwhelmed before the race.