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one element replaces one element
Yes, one box represents one element.
To be pure, it has to be only one element.
Many of the planets have more than one element. Two of these planets that have more than one element are Earth and Jupiter.
Oxygen combined with one other element is an oxide.
The former. The style belongs to the author, and therefore a possessive is required. The one with the apostrophe is the possessive form, assuming that the style belongs to only one author. If there were more than one author with the same style, it would be "authors' style". The one without the apostrophe is gibberish.
One major element that establishes the voice of a work of literature is the choice of language and style that the author uses to convey their ideas, emotions, and perspective. The voice can also be shaped by the author's tone, point of view, and the way characters speak and interact in the story.
Yes. There's no way for the browser to know that you intend for an inline CSS style (one using the style attribute of an element) to apply on other objects. Use classes or selectors in the stylesheet to achieve this instead.
An author's style refers to the unique way in which they express their ideas through writing. This can include their choice of language, sentence structure, use of literary devices, and overall tone and voice. An author's style is like a signature that sets them apart from other writers.
It's third person limited because the author reveals only the thoughts of one main character (Tom).
Color
Yes. You just have to fight the right number of battles and Mega will evolve into a new style; just hope it's the right one. You can't get an element you already have, though, until you get rid of that style.
Each author's style and structure are different when one author uses a certain set of words and a second author uses a different set of words and they each string words together in a different manner.Note: Each author can also change his/her style and structure from piece to piece.
In APA style, when referencing Author B in Author A's work, you would cite Author B's work as a secondary source. In the reference list, you would include Author B's work as the source you consulted. In the text, you would cite Author A and indicate that you are referring to information from Author B. For example, "According to Author B (as cited in Author A, year), ...".
In APA style, when one author discusses another author in their paper, you should cite the original author (Author B) using an indirect citation format. This means you include Author B's last name and the year of publication for their work in the in-text citation. For example: (Author B, Year)
One element takes the place of another in a compound.
No element contains more than one element.