the woman full of mischief was found for abandanment for leaving her children unattended
Whenever Pete was in the boys changing rooms, you knew he was up to mischief.
she always tried to entice her baby brother into mischief
The woman was found guilty of abandonment, because she left her children unattended.
Eg) Many children in the third world are malnourished The dog was malnourished due to abandonment
You use he or she when you already have referred to a person in a sentence before, or earlier in the same sentence.
Here is how you would use it to imply mischief by the subject: "I can see through their shenanigans." or "The teacher would not tolerate any shenanigans."
Yes, you can use both "can" and "may" in the same sentence. For example, "You can call me if you may need help with your homework."
Example sentence - The teams will converge on the hill at the same time.
I have a friend that has a broken leg.
yea
You wrote with two hands at the same time.
"Insameway" is not a word. Do you mean "How do you use 'in the same way' in a sentence?"You use it in the same way as you use any other words.In the same way as you write other sentences, you write this one.