English, asked by sanketchanglani, 4 months ago

when was the essay written by you​


angelnandini: whtt
angelnandini: whom u r saying dude
sanketchanglani: kuch nahi
sanketchanglani: bas asa hee
angelnandini: fir ye San galiyaan kisko
angelnandini: sab
angelnandini: arre mujhe nhi Bola na
sanketchanglani: aap kon ho
angelnandini: Bhai ladki hoon aur kon
angelnandini: aapko kya Janna hai

Answers

Answered by angelnandini
0

Answer:

last year

Explanation:

nandjshskaysvshsygwbakamam

Answered by Anonymous
2

Explanation:

The principle purpose of the introduction is to present your position (this is also known as the "thesis" or "argument") on the issue at hand but effective introductory paragraphs are so much more than that. Before you even get to this thesis statement, for example, the essay should begin with a "hook" that grabs the reader’s attention and makes them want to read on. Examples of effective hooks include relevant quotations ("no man is an island") or surprising statistics ("three out of four doctors report that…").

Only then, with the reader’s attention "hooked," should you move on to the thesis. The thesis should be a clear, one-sentence explanation of your position that leaves no doubt in the reader’s mind about which side you are on from the beginning of your essay.

Following the thesis, you should provide a mini-outline which previews the examples you will use to support your thesis in the rest of the essay. Not only does this tell the reader what to expect in the paragraphs to come but it also gives them a clearer understanding of what the essay is about.


sanketchanglani: madarchod
sanketchanglani: bhosdika
sanketchanglani: le mu ma
angelnandini: wht is this dude
sanketchanglani: sorry di
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