sara blamed Robert for letting sable outside and yelled at him
a writtin log of how one character's feelings influence the story and other characters
The topic sentence, the body with supporting sentences, and the clincher sentence
a story map is a map of characters, main idea, the plot, setting, and questions. You would usually use a story map if you just got a book and before you read it you make a story map, and throughout that book you could fill in the bubbles, blocks, squares, etc.
The word 'title' is a noun, modified by the noun 'map'. A noun used to describe another noun is called an attributive noun. Example: The map title is important because it tells you what you are looking at. The word 'map' is also a verb: map, maps, mapping, mapped. The word 'title' is also a verb: title, titles, titling, titled.
You could use either article, but "a" makes more sense. "Please draw the map" would mean that there was only one map, and we all know there are many maps of India in the world. So you'd say "Please draw a map."
Known as an Insert, it could be an enlarged part of a city to show more detail.
a written log of how one character's feelings influence the story and other characters
a writtin log of how one character's feelings influence the story and other characters
it is helpful to use different types of weather map because different weather map could help you, like if a map has a part that you need and the other map does not.
The part of a map that tells direction
geological map
That depends on what type of map you are referring to. On a weather map it's usually part of a warm front. On a road map they could be any type of road the cartographer specifies. On a topographical map they could be elevation lines. On the Washington Transit Map it's the red line train. Check the legend and it will more than likely tell you.
The part of a map that tells direction
The part of a map that tells direction
The part of a map that tells direction
That depends on what type of map you are referring to. On a weather map it's usually part of a warm front. On a road map they could be any type of road the cartographer specifies. On a topographical map they could be elevation lines. On the Washington Transit Map it's the red line train. Check the legend and it will more than likely tell you.
That depends on what type of map you are referring to. On a weather map it's usually part of a warm front. On a road map they could be any type of road the cartographer specifies. On a topographical map they could be elevation lines. On the Washington Transit Map it's the red line train. Check the legend and it will more than likely tell you.