Matilda Foster, after a piano peice fell on her foot.
If you mean in front of an audience, Lenny Bruce.
They are a lot of controversy going on with the word publicly and publically. People do not know how to use the word, but it should be publicly, as publically is not a word.
He publicly apologized for embarassing her. The opposition was publicly recognized for having run a fair campaign.
The first basemen on the padres was the first person to bat in the next inning.
The first person to use the word geography was Eratosthenes. Eratosthenes was a Greek scholar and chief librarian of the Library of Alexandria. He invented geography including most of the terminology still in use.
It works for all three, but it depends on the way you use it.
The correct spelling and grammatical use for you question would be "selves". Grammatically I would have asked, "Who was the first person to actually use cutting as a form of psychological "punishment" or "fulfillment"". The answer would have to be that there would be no way to actually know. Not every person who cuts themselves would tend to reveal it publicly.
It's unkwown as to who was the first person to say the word mandatory. There are many words that are part of our lexicon that originated in a certain book or printing. However, it's vary rare to say who exactly was the first person to use the word or phrase.
I believe it was Democritus.
No, the pronoun 'your' is the secondperson possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun as belonging to the person spoken to.
Another way to use a person's ideas but not word for word is to paraphrase.
first person who use map
In third person writing, it is typically recommended to avoid using personal pronouns like "I" or "you" since the narrator is external to the story. Additionally, it is best to minimize the use of first-person language such as "my," "mine," or "our" to maintain a more objective tone.