Miss Sophia says, "All my life I had to fight." This line reflects the strength and resilience she has developed from facing adversity and oppression throughout her life. It is a powerful statement of empowerment and defiance.
MOPS stands for metaphors, onomatopoeia, personification, and similes. This is good to put inside your writing. Metaphors is when you say something is something else. Onomatopoeia is when the word your using sounds like the way it sounds. Personification is when you give an inanimate object human characteristics. Lastly, similes is when you say something is like something else.
The word Philosophy has no generally accepted definition, it've been defined by philosophers from different angles, but it can be defined through the eye of etymology which sees it as love of wisdom based on the two root word ; philene and sophia: philene meaning love and sophia wisdom. Looking at definitions giving by philosophers, layman, and it etymological mean one can say that philosophy it a speculative activity geared towards acquisition of truth and wisdom.
"SMH" stands for "shaking my head" and is used to express disappointment, disapproval, or frustration in response to something someone has said or done on Facebook or in a conversation. It is a way to convey a sense of disbelief or disappointment without having to say much else.
First, it is rude. Second, it won't help you if you don't learn. By talking you are telling the teacher that what you say is more important than what they are saying. You might miss important info and you won't know how to do your homework. It might also be on the test and you would miss the question. If you are doing a test the teacher would think that you were cheating and give you a 0. That is not fun
In Filipino, you can say "hindi" to mean no.
talofa sophia!
" I love Harpo God knows I do, But I'll kill him dead for I let him Beat me"
Sophia is said like this in Hebrew: סופיה
A Sophia le gusta Joey.
miss kita - is how you say i miss you in tagalog
In Pig Latin, Sophia would be pronounced as "Ophiesay."
To say "I miss him" in Swahili, you would say "Ninam-miss."
To say "I miss you" in Igbo, you would say "Achorom ikpo gi."
How do I say, I miss you in Tongan
We will miss you.
To say "I miss you" in Cebuano, you can say "Miss tika."
We 'British' would say "I miss you"