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To a certain extent, history is biased. You must remember, the winner of the battle gets to write about it, not the looser. Only a very skilled historian/researcher can unravel conflicting contemporary writings.
Often, yes. History has already occurred, so it will usually go into the past tense. There are exceptions, like if a teacher wants it in present tense, or if you must write as if that event was current.
"If you can read and write, you can do anything and go anywhere. You can ride the wind." The Richmond National Parks Quarterly Newsletter Issue 7: Spring 2001 http://www.nps.gov/archive/rich/spr01p2.html
once you delete the emails, no one can get them except the creators of facebook. You could erase ur computer's memory or internet history. If ur worried about someone getting to it then u probably shouldn't write it. good luck :)
It refers to seeing an issue or a topic from the reader's point of view ("you") instead of from my own ("me"). For example: "I intend to let you know next week if you are getting promoted" is an example of the "I" perspective. But, "You will be notified next week about whether you got your promotion" demonstrated a "you" perspective. And it's not only about what pronouns you use. The "you attitude" means writing as if you are talking to a real person, using communication that lets that person know you are talking directly to them. I enclose a link to an excellent explanation of how to write in the "you attitude" and what mistakes to avoid.
because if u write history it's ur point of view.
Some famous quote lines from history are "I like the dreams of the future better than the history of the past" by Thomas Jefferson and the quote "History will be kind to me for I intend to write it." which was said by Winston Churchill.
Some famous quote lines from history are "I like the dreams of the future better than the history of the past" by Thomas Jefferson and the quote "History will be kind to me for I intend to write it." which was said by Winston Churchill.
Since this is a quote and was therefore written in the past, it was intended as a self-fulfilling statement.
I intend to answer this question a little later. If you intend to proceed, please do so immediately.
About what quote? Write it here.
You can quote me on that.
No he did not.
To write an assertion you introduce the quote or example, document the quote or example, then add commentary. If it is a quote from a book, then it will look like this. Intro to quote. "Quote" then (page # in parenthesis) then a period. Commentary (why you picked the quote, about the quote, etc). Hope this helped! =)
no
The first step for a speech is to organize what aspects of Auckland you intend to focus on. Economy, foreign relations, history, and legal issues may all be considered.
Adding a double quote after a number signifies it is inches. For example, 8" means eight inches.