What is the statements or question is basically about and what you understand about it and what are the punctuation marks in that sentence
You can ask yourself the following questions to try to find the main idea: What is the main character of the story trying to accomplish or what is their main goal? What lesson did I learn from reading this? What is being said about the person, thing, or idea (the topic)? What is the writer trying to say? What is the most important point the author wants me to understand about the topic? Is there a topic sentence?
Try to put yourself in the shoes of the prepositon. Compare your topic to your life. Find similarities between the topic and yourself and how it applies to you in everyday life
You are trying to answer a problem or question and test your hypothesis.
Comparing WikiAnswers, Wikipedia, and Google is difficult. They are totally different, and exist for different purposes.WikiAnswers: A community-based question and answer siteWikipedia: A community-based encyclopediaGoogle: A search engineFor which one is better, it really depends on what you are trying to do. If you are trying to find information on a general topic, Google is the best. If you are trying to gain background information on a specific topic, Wikipedia is the best. If you are finding an answer to a specific question, WikiAnswers is the best option.
Figure it out yourself, cheater!
The topic sentence or thesis statement gives you the main idea of the paragraph. If you are not sure what the main idea is, read the paragraph again and look at each sentence. See if that is the sentence which all the other sentences support by turning it into a question and see if the other sentences answer that question.The topic sentence is usually the first sentence of the paragraph. It makes a statement about a topic and the rest of the paragraph explains the topic sentence or gives examples of the topic sentence.
The three major steps are find think about your topic, find your main question, and use your resources to answer the question.
To find supporting details, ask yourself, "What evidence, examples, or explanations can I provide to clarify or strengthen my main point?" This question encourages you to think critically about the information and arguments that back up your claims. Additionally, consider asking, "What experiences or facts relate directly to my topic?" This can help pinpoint relevant details that enhance your understanding or presentation of the subject.
I am trying to find out the answer to this question, not answer it!
Look deep inside yourself to find the answer.
I don't know figure it out yourself. Im trying to find it
I don't know figure it out yourself. Im trying to find it