너 아직 학교 다?
neo ajig haggyo da?
I used google translate, so this may be inaccurate.
Question :
<span>The words adieu in line 36 entered our language do to
Answer :
</span>
Answer:
I will wake up today at 7 o'clock. At 8 o'clock, we will make cereals for morning rice. I will go to school at 8:30. I play with Daniel at school. Play chess in the school cafeteria. I will go to Koen at 3:30. I will go to Noe at 4 o'clock. We will play "Rocket League" at 8 o'clock. I will study hard at 9 o'clock. At the end, I will go to bed at 12 o'clock.
Kyō kyō wa 7-jiji ni Okoshi o kimasu. 8-Jiji ni asa a sa gohan-han ni shiriaru-saku tsukurimasu. 8-Jihanji han ni gakkō gakkō e gyō i kimasu. Gakkō gakkōde Danieru-san to Yū a so bimasu. Gakkō gakkō no kafeteria de chesu o Yū a so bimasu. 3-Jihanji han ni kōen e gyō ikimasu. 4-Jiji ni ie e gyō ikimasu. 8-Jiji ni `roketto League' o Yū asobimasu. 9-Jiji ni Tsutomu tsuyo be n kyō o shimasu. Saigo sai go ni, 12-jiji ni ne nemasu.
Hope this helps!!!!!
Within 72 hours of death, they begin to speak in metaphors of journey. They request their shoes, or their plane tickets or demand to go home when they are home. When my sister lay dying of breast cancer, she said, as if frustrated, “I don’t know how to leave,” and spoke of “hapless flight attendants.”
How are you using two English words in this sentence