It tries to persuade current readers to buy more books and save the publishing industry.
Take sides and work to end suffering
An afterword is a comment from the author or an epilogue at the end of a book. It is a concluding section and can be written by someone other than the author.
"Sweeps the nation" comes from the first PacMac game in the early 60s. In the game, PacMan is seen to use a broom and dustpan to get rid of the killer ghosts. Once the ghosts were dispatched, PacMan would move on to sweep up other areas of the game. When the entire nation had been swept, the game would end. Thus "sweep the nation" came to mean anything that effectively covered the entire nation in a small amount of time. (A full game only lasted a few minutes.)
A Room With A View, Howards End, and Maurice. All by Merchant Ivory Productions. "A Passage to India", was distributed by Columbia Pictures.
Usually we think of it as just meaning no end. In some contexts it can mean both.
The symbol at the end of a passage could indicate the end of the text or section. It may also serve as a visual cue for the reader to take note of the conclusion. In some cases, it can signify a pause or a transition in the content.
study island huh? do your work kid.
In music, a coda be used in a few different ways. It is primarily used to designate a passage that brings a piece to an end. It could be as simple as a few measures, or as complex as an entire section.
It means: It is at the end of the section.
Slavery ended.
A double bar-line indicates the end of a section. When the second line is thicker than the first, it indicates the end of the piece.
Comedy Nation ended in 1999.
Velvet Nation ended in 2006.
Awakening of the Nation ended in 1998.
Alternative Nation ended in 1997.
think its cadenza
Nelson Section ended in 1955.