make your own:) Excellent idea. However the key here is motivational. Pick a subject for which you have strong feelings or passions. One of mine would be the sea. Then you need to search for such poems. Choose an appropriate one and see how long it take to recite. Remember reciting is not the same as reading it. Practice reciting to get the correct timing, intonation and pauses in the poem. It does not need to be exactly 90 seconds long. An extract of a longer poem could be used telling the listeners beforehand it is an extract.
The Second Coming by William Butler Yeats. Turning and turning in the widening gyreThe falcon cannot hear the falconer;Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
It's a line from a Yeats poem called "The Second Coming." But, you may be looking for something else.
second
Second Best Bed was created in 1938.
The second Sam Mitchell was played by Kim Medcalf.
Learn your times tables. :)
Read the first sentence over and over and memorize it. Then do the same with the second. Then recite the first and second. Read the third over and over and memorize it. Then recite all three. Continue to do this for the first paragraph before moving on to the second. Do the same with the second paragraph and then recite the first and second. Continue to do this for the entire body of writing that you need to memorize. This is a slow process but it works for me.
First. The emphasis is on the MEH at th bginning, and neither of the other syllables are accented.
Second life
No you cannot get a second map.
You cannot convert cubic meters per second to meters per second. You cannot convert volume to length.
You cannot get a second gate.
You cannot make a website using Second Life.
You cannot lose any noticeable amount of body fat in one second.
The second condition of static equilibrium states that the net torque cannot be equal to zero
This question cannot be answered unless you restate it. There are 0.0167 minutes in a second.
No, first xenon is an element, and so cannot be polar. Second, it is monatomic, and a single atom cannot be polar.