Well, If it was hot outside the day before it started raining, then you can say "Remember how hot it was yesterday? It will be a very nice change of temperature. Very cool and refreshing." Other examples of persuasive language could be "We can jump in the puddles for fun if you want, too!" Or, if they don't like that idea, you can always say "We can make a game out of dodging the puddles while we run, by jumping over them and running past them!"
Answer:
The right word to the synonyms decide, settle is {resolve}..!!
Answer:
magnetic strip, or a microchip, or both.
Castles<span> were primarily built </span>during<span> the </span>wars<span> of the late Middle Ages for the purpose of protection.</span>
The answer happens to obviously be letter C and here is why, a connotation is a choice in words in a form of literature that can give a stronger feeling to the sentence. For example instead of saying scary i could say horifying and that would be a stronger, negative connotation of fear, based on the fact that c is the only negative one, "Crowded and sticky."