the answers to this is irony
A thesis statement should tell the reader what the paper is about and also help guide the writing and keep the argument focused. In this paragraph, the best thesis statement is, "Time Management will give you the opportunity to have a non-complicated in your life, focusing on your life."
Thesis: "Time Management will give you the opportunity to have a non-complicated in your life, focusing on your life."
1. No worries
- Get a good night's sleep
- Start the day with vitality
2. Have set goals
- daily schedule- respect time frames for each activity
- not in a hurry
3. Planning
- Can check your goals in writing
- Able to add reminders to keep on with the goals' accomplishment
The paragraph is short, so the main points made are the three major supporting details. Then, using additional points from the paragraph, you can find minor supporting detail for each major supporting detail. The answer could vary slightly depending on one's interpretation of what is the most important in the paragraph, but generally these are the main ideas.
Note: I believe there may be a word missing in the thesis or the first sentence of the paragraph, after non-complicated and before in.
Answer:
A claim about the similarities and / or differences between two literary works
Prufrock has all the normal desires of a young man, but he is ultimately incapable of doing anything. He is compelled to think everything through, but it doesn't help him at all. The thoughts just can't transform into actions, in part because he is afraid, in part because he lacks confidence, and in part because he can see no sense in all of it. He doesn't "dare disturb the universe" by asking "an overwhelming question". He is only capable of entering trivial, petty interactions with the world obsessed with material, "the cups, the marmalade, the tea, / <span>Among the porcelain, among some talk of you and me". This matter renders Prufrock's existence futile, and he is all too aware of it. His intelligence doesn't help him at all, because it locks him into a self-indulgent, passive world, rendering him aware of all the impossibilities.</span>