One possibility is using a synonym for the noun.
For example, beast could be used instead of animal.
You can use pronouns such as "it," "he," or "she" to replace the noun, or you can use synonyms or phrases to vary your writing and avoid repetition.
A pronoun is a word that can replace a noun to prevent repetitive use of the same noun in a sentence or paragraph. Common pronouns include he, she, they, it, and we.
After "no," we use a singular noun. For example, "No child" instead of "No children."
The pronoun 'my' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to the speaker.Example: That is my house on the corner.The sentence can be changed in order to use the possessive pronoun 'mine', a word that takes the place of a noun for something that belongs to the speaker.Example: That house on the corner is mine.
A pronoun. It replaces the use of a noun.ex. instead of...This question is stupidthe question being the nounyou could use it as a pronoun...it is stupid
most of the time yes instead of saying Mrs Cockyspot went to the store and Mrs Cockyspot bought a glass of milk and Mrs Cock.... you can say Mrs Cockyspot went to the store and SHE bought a glass of milk and SHE... or you can use this, that, them, us, we, you, or i or me any way i hope this helps
Find another noun that means the same thing. Use a thesaurus to help you.
For a single repeating digit, it is a dot over the digit.For string of repeating digits, it can be a dot over the first and last repeating digits, or a bar over the repeating string.
It is: 5.'63' repeating '63'
Some people use an ellipsis, some people put a line over the repeating part, some people write the word "repeating" or "recurring."
Their belongings are over there.
"I enjoy reading poetry that uses alliteration to create a melodious flow of sounds."
You can sometimes us a proper noun in place of a common noun but you would have to change the sentence. You should use a pronoun instead.
I rely on my thesaurus when I am writing so that I can express myself without repeating the same word over and over.
The noun animalcule is now known as microorganism
With the small sample provided, it doesn't look as if it is repeating. The problem, however, lies in the "and so forth"; it is not clear what rule you use to write the decimal digits, and depending on what exactly that rule is, it may, or may not, be a repeating decimal. To be "repeating", and therefore a rational number, after a while the same group of digits has to repeat over and over, without end.
The bar is only used for repeating decimals. If it is repeating, you can use it.
you use the decimal that is repeating and out that number twice. examples: .6 repeating= 66 percent 0.9 repeating= 99%