He embodied everything that was good about people by his actions in helping them.
You can use the sentence: She spoke to him reprovingly
we should use had if the sentence is in past tence
You should use the word "I" when it is the subject of a sentence, and the word "me" when it is the object of a sentence or of a preposition. "I want you to understand me." "I want you to listen to me."
If it is in the past.
As soon as he does that you should do this.
you should have a answer
use "that" when the meaning of the sentence changes. Sometimes "that" can be left out of the sentence. Never use a comma with "that". Use "which" when the meaning of the sentence does not change. Always use a comma with "which".
What is this? What are you doing? What should we do? This is what i was looking for.
You should use the word "where" is a sentence when refering to a place or location. For an example: "Where were you going?" Which you could also ask as "To which place were you going?"
You should use the word "where" is a sentence when refering to a place or location. For an example: "Where were you going?" Which you could also ask as "To which place were you going?"
Constitutionalism
Yes. Muslims are not pacifists. Whether or not they should fight in any particular instance and the method that they should use while fighting is subject to incredibly nuanced Islamic legal jurisprudence as embodied in Shari'a.