dude. that's not a question.
The novel was based on ancient and medieval romances.
A basic structure that most fiction follows
Non-fiction is all true, fiction is not true. The only problem is when the line is blurred, and a book contains fiction and non-fiction. Classifying them is hard. Hint: Fiction: Fake Non-fiction: Not fake ****** Non-fiction is books that are written about things that ARE TRUE, for example, bigraphies, history books, books that are written from a first hand experience of an event, and so on. Fiction is made up stuff, fantasy, sci-fi, etc., things that ARE NOT TRUE. The really tricky one is historical fiction, which is fiction that is based off of a historical event, but is still considered fiction. (I have heard that this is particularly tricky to write...you can imagine.) Similarities? Almost none. They both use words, I suppose, and are contained within books, but you could only really try to find similarities if you were examining two (or more) specific books.
A nation is a large group of people united by ... common descent; and/or culture; and/or language; and/or history; ... and occupying a particular region or territory or country
There are two basic types of conjunction: co-ordinating (for example 'and') and subordinating (for example 'although'). Co-ordinating conjunctions may be used in pairs to form a correlative conjunction (for example 'either'/'or').
NH3 is formula for a basic compound, Ammonia.NH4+ is formula for a basic cation, Ammonium.
The novel was based on ancient and medieval romances.
No, the basic unit for a covalent bond is a molecule and for ionic it is formula units.
A basic structure that most fiction follows.
Here is a link to some of them.
literal images
A basic structure that most fiction follows
A basic structure that most fiction follows
K2o
A basic structure that most fiction follows
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C4H6O6 (Basic formula)HO2CCH(OH)CH(OH)CO2H(Structural formula)