Go to your classes, especially english, and you might get your phone back.
you have to play it and really listen to all of the lesson that alex gives you
Of course not, provided the competence is really the same.
No, Leonardo didn't go to school. People didn't really attend school as we do nowadays. They would learn a trade by joining a studio or shop by being an apprentice to a Master. Leonardo learned his trade as an apprentice at Verrocchio's studio.
A panorama is a picture that has an extreme aspect ratio, generally more than 1:3. That means that it is really really wide, or really really tall.
Yes, it really is.
you have to be really careful even when traveling in groups because even then can bad things hapen!
Nothing really happen intell you loose alot.
Oh, dude, in the song "Bahay Kubo," the lesson learned is basically that a small nipa hut can have a variety of plants around it that provide everything you need to live. It's like a Filipino version of "Farmville." So, like, the real lesson is probably something about appreciating simplicity or sustainable living, but who really knows, right?
Yes theme is the lesson you learn. I learned it in seventh grade with mr sturgeon, my seventh grade english teacher. It is really easy. Put a letter L up to your head and move the L back and force by saying "theme is the lesson you learn"
A quiz is to see if you remember what you learned from your lesson. A timed test is to see if you really understand the work.
I ABSOLUTELY hate that! I especially get really embarrassed when i don't pay attention and the teacher calls on me! eeek! I know i learned my lesson for sure.
Oh honey, Jane learned a lot of lessons in "The Moffats." She learned about family, friendship, and the importance of sticking together through thick and thin. But most importantly, she learned that life is full of ups and downs, and it's all about how you handle it that really matters.
Well, the theme is love, of course, but also fate in the sense of bad luck. People argue endlessly and pointlessly about whose fault Romeo and Juliet's deaths were, but you cannot deny that they had some really bad luck which pushed them to their end. As for "what was the lesson learned by the main character and you", this sounds like the kind of silly question a teacher might ask, just to make you annoyed. As I hope you know, there is more than one main character in the play, and at the end they have not learned any lessons, since they are both dead. The lesson I hope you have learned is "watching Shakespeare's plays is fun, 'cause they're full of loving and fighting and dying and awesome speeches". If you have not got that lesson, your teacher did a poor job of presenting the play to you. If your teacher thinks that the lesson you are supposed to learn is something like "Let your parents arrange your marriage", then your teacher needs to learn that watching Shakespeare's plays is fun, 'cause they're full of loving and fighting etc. (and they don't teach moral lessons).
be honest and let them know you have learned your lesson. But only if you really have learned your lesson. If you lose another job because of it you will become a risk to future potential employers. Suprisingly, many employers won't ask why you left your last job. For others, you may want to tell them you had health problems or a family situation that affected your attendance, but is cleared up now.
There really isn't a lesson, it's just a fun exciting book.
In Pendragon book 2, "The Lost City of Faar," the lesson was about the importance of teamwork and trust. The main characters, Bobby and Loor, had to work together and rely on each other's strengths to overcome challenges and achieve their goal. They learned that mutual respect and cooperation were key to their success.
The fuel pumps are very sensitivve on the corsicas, as i learned my lesson several times , from trying to get places on no gas . They burn out really quick, if u abuse your