Answer: Think about the question from your own life - which of these types of non-fiction resources do YOU use most often? Why is it useful to you? What makes you choose to use that type instead of one of the others?
Explanation: Answering those questions should give you your response, and then you'll just need to edit your grammar, spelling, capitalization, and punctuation.
Dad scolded Miriam for skipping her chores.<span>No one likes my cooking.
</span>Working out always makes me hungry.<span>Playing is all the cat does.
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I’m pretty sure it’s he wanted to save him for tomorrow
Petrarch's Sonnet 18 is about Laura, her beauty and Petrarch's incapability to describe her beauty in a proper way.
His love for her is related in this sonnet. He is continually praising her beauty
"When first I saw thee I recall the time,
Pleasing as none shall ever please again."
"...Full oft I oped my lips to chant thy name..."
It is also a poem about defeat. He uses repeatedly negative words and phrases to state clearly that her beauty is impossible for him to describe, "unsung...in my rhyme". He hasn't got any possibilities to make a proper description of her beauty, nor to describe her brightness.
"But ah, the pen, the hand, the vein I boast,
At once were vanquish'd by the mighty theme!
He uses negative words and phrases to strengthen the idea of his inability to make a suitable portrayal of her because her beauty is such that it exceeds his chance to describe it. He hasn't got the strength nor the genius.
Horatio is Hamlet's faithful, reasonable friend in Hamlet<span> by William Shakespeare. In many ways he is Hamlet's foil, representing everything Hamlet is not. Rather than immediately accepting his friends' word that the ghost of King Hamlet has been appearing, for example, he goes to see for himself; even then, he has to think things through before he concludes that it is the ghost of the dead king and before he will bother Hamlet with the news of these sightings. </span>