If I was in that nail salon and saw a person stealing someone else’s engagement ring, I will immediately stop the pickpocket. After making sure that the thief has not possess any dangerous weapon, I will slowly approach and ask him the reason for doing it. Meanwhile, I will signal the bystanders to seek help from police. I then give him advice and tell him the consequences of stealing. It is because everyone has no right to go shortcut in life. We need to pay our effort for the result. Next, I will ask him to apologize to the owner and motivate him to be an honest man.
FALSE because "Sit!" is a sentence as when you instruct a dog to sit that is a whole sentence on its own.
The author who would become famous as Mark Twain started out in life as Samuel Clemens. Born and raised along the Mississippi River, Clemens would start out in life as a steamboat pilot.
This book, which was written after he was a famous writer, tells the story of his life on the river. In the first part, he is a cub pilot under his mentor, Horace Bixby, who teaches him how to navigate the treacherous river. The very very wordy Twain mixes it up in this part of the book, describing both the river, steamboats, steamboating, etc., and what happens to him as a pilot. This is an interesting part of the book because it includes a fair amount of commentary about life in America after the Civil War, reflecting on the differences between the North and the South.
<span>"the decor is a harmonious blend of traditional and modern"</span>
This is true. Narrative stories are usually fictional, but some authors write narrative stories that are kind of similar to memoirs in the sense that they document a true experience from the author's life.