This depends on the laws of your city, known as ordinances. The city has the right to legislate ordinances to force someone to keep his yard clean, especially the front yard, which anyone passing by can look at.
It depends which person you work for. if that person will pay you , rake their yard. if you don't have a buisness yet, let people know around your neiborhood with flyers, emails, phonecalls, buisness cards, or speak to them in person.
If the season is Autumn or Fall then the effect is much raking of leaves.
She raked her fingers through her long blond hair.
You might try yard work(mowing, raking, weeding) in your neighbors' yards.
lemonade stand gardening sweeping vacuuming dusting raking shoveling snow cleaning windows yard sale
Raking leaves is the proper English phrase to use.
Raking the Ashes was created in 2005.
The word monotonous means something is boring, repetitive or tedious. An example using the word would be "John found raking the leaves in his yard to be monotonous."
a person who works in a yard
No the word raking is not a noun. It is the present participle of the verb rake.
Sure, Girls- Babysitting, organizing peoples closet's in the neighborhood, animal sitting Boys- Yard work-mowing lawn, raking leaves
A ticket vendor is a person who sells tickets -.-