11 For the dialog we know that. A. The students' music festival will be held soon. B. Mia and Adib use to practice music together. C. Adib invited Mia to watch his performance in a festival. D. Mia had no idea that Adib participated in a music festival. 12.
Thefollowing dialog is for questions na: Andi, please read the announcement. Andi : Sure. What is it about? Mitha : The school's team members for the det competition. Look, your name is first. Congratulations, Andi! Andi : Am I? You are right. Thank you, Mitha. Mitha: Your hard work has been paid off, but you have to work harder to prepare for the
Thefollowing dialog is for questions 2 and 3. Ihsan: I have a problem with my phone. It says I have the storage overloaded, but I cannot locate the files to erase. Laras: Maybe you should take it to the service center. I'm sure they can help you. What is Ihsan's suitable response to decline Laras' suggestion? . .
Takingfingerprints You do this1.(1). The following Pencil typing paper Clear tape magnifying hand glass2.(2) The sharpened end of the pencil (3 ) A sheet of paper 15 to 20 timesto collect a layer of graphite on the paper3. Rub your (4) Indext across the graphite on the (5) 4.(6).. Off about 2 and ½ centimeters of clear tape. (7)
Thefollowing dialog is for questions 6 to 9. Adelia: What do you think about this action figure? Dipta: Amazing! It looks so real. Adelia: Thanks. Dipta: By the way, where did you buy it? Adelia: I didn't buy this. I made it. Dipta: What? Did you make it yourself? Adelia: Yes, I did. Dipta: It's unbelievable! Where did you learn to make such a handicraft?
Thefollowing dialog is for questions 1 to 3. Sakti: To increase our skill in utilizing the outdoor gears and surviving in nature, let's make a camp on Mount Prau. Berti: That is a good idea.
Thefollowing dialog is for questions 1-7. Dewi : Alin, it's lunch time! Let's go to the cafeteria! Alin : Yeah, I am starving. You see, I didn't have breakfast this morning. I was in a hurry because I woke up late for school. Dewi : Okay, what are you going to order Alin : I'd like to have some fast food. I love
Thefollowing dialog is for the question. Fara: You and your family bought a new house in a rural area. Of course, it will cost a lot of money and energy because you have to spend money to go to sch
AdEzUA. Boston’s Pride parade and festival returned after a three-year hiatus on Saturday in a massive event celebrating the “rich diversity, culture and intersectionality of the LGBTQ+ community.”Around 10,000 people signed up to participate in the two-hour celebratory march through the streets of downtown Boston, according to Boston Pride for the People BP4TP, the volunteer-run nonprofit that now organizes the city’s Pride Pride parade and festival — the largest in New England — were canceled in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. But as the country slowly began to reopen, the parade was again canceled in 2022 after event organizer Boston Pride moved to dissolve amid a series of boycotts and criticism over the nonprofit’s lack of performer Neon Calypso, center, sings and dances to Tina Turner's version of the song "Proud Mary," during a Pride Month Celebration on June 7, 2023, in front of the Statehouse in Boston. Steven Senne/APIn June 2021, then-Boston Pride president Linda DeMarco announced her resignation saying the boycotts were “really hurting the community.”New organizers BP4TP say the fresh start for Boston Pride offers an opportunity to “all LGBTQ+ people, especially those who face intersecting forms of oppression,” to celebrate the rich diversity of the LGBTQ community and renew a commitment to “disrupting and dismantling systems that cause harm to LGBTQ+ people.”Breaking NewsAs it happensGet updates on the coronavirus pandemic and other news as it happens with our free breaking news email group came together last September to create a more inclusive and less corporate celebration, according to the group’s vice president Jo Gov. Maura Healey, below center, takes a selfie with drag performers, including MT Hart, below left, and Zayn X, below center right, during a Pride Month Celebration on June 7, 2023, on the steps of the Statehouse in Boston. Steven Senne/APThis year’s celebrations included a nearly 2-mile parade, which kicked off at 11 at Copley Square, and an all-age festival at Boston Common park. A second event for the 21+ crowd will also feature DJs, dancing and drinks at City Hall Rep. Ayanna Pressley D-Mass. was featured in the parade, riding in a bus alongside members of the LGBTQ Senior Coalition.“Thank your elders, y’all. They paved the way,” Pressley wrote on Twitter, sharing a short video of the colorful, bubble-filled bus Democratic Gov. Maura Healey — one of the county’s first two openly lesbian governors alongside Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek — also took part in the event, noting this year’s celebration is especially important amid an increasing attack on LGBTQ rights in statehouses across the country.“This is a particularly special one to be marching in this year and at this time where we see states and some governors going backward, taking away equality, taking away freedoms, demonizing members of the LGBTQ community, hurting them, banning books, banning shows, banning access to even health care,” Healey News Wire Services
Dale Wheatley, who performs deliveries for the Anatomical Gift Association of Illinois, came into work two weeks ago and found sage burning and three severed heads lying on a plastic container by his who has worked for AGA for nearly five years, said he’s never seen anything like the horror movie-like scene he stumbled upon that Wednesday morning in late said the heads from AGA donors were placed next to his desk after he reported concerns about the mishandling and poor conditions of donated bodies to his supervisors. But AGA Executive Vice President William O’Connor denied any maltreatment accusations, saying that handling body parts is in Wheatley’s job said he filed a police report after the heads showed up at his desk, and is now filing complaints with local and state of deceased donate bodies to the not-for-profit to be used in the training of medical students at eight universities across the state, and mishandling causes the bodies to be unfit for use, Wheatley said at a news conference with an attorney Tuesday afternoon.“The place is deplorable. It’s in shabby conditions,” he said. “If you’re in there for more than five minutes, if you start walking around, you start to stick to the floor.”AGA writes on its website that it aims to “help donors and their families make their donations with the confidence that the AGA will observe the highest standards of responsiveness, respect, privacy and security.”O’Connor said it is Wheatley’s responsibility to handle the bodies. The organization, formerly known as the Demonstrator’s Society, has been in operation for over a manages the “rack room,” or the room where bodies are held at AGA. He drives around to medical institutions, loading and unloading body parts from the tiered racking system in the AGA van. A QR system is used to identify body parts, which are embalmed, distributed for study purposes and then cremated and returned to University Feinberg School of Medicine anatomy lab manager Casey Tilden sent an email the day before the heads appeared in Wheatley’s office, complaining about the conditions of the donors they received. “Donors,” or those who have donated their bodies for medical use, were covered with flies or contorted in such a way that they couldn’t be used, Tilden wrote in the email, which was provided to the Tribune.“There are a handful of donors that were recently delivered with feet and hands that show signs of decomposition,” Tilden said in the message to to Wheatley, other universities have also emailed felt the heads were a method of retaliation in response to his concerns, he Fish, an employment lawyer and partner at Fish Potter Bolaños said he filed complaints on Wheatley’s behalf with the Cook County medical examiner’s office, Illinois Department of Public Health and Illinois Department of Financial & Professional Regulation as part of an effort to clean up conditions at AGA. Copies of those complaints were provided to the the complaints, Fish asked for an investigation into embalming techniques used at AGA.“Mr. Wheatley believes that AGA should have, and utilize, a scale to weigh donors’ bodies to determine the amount of embalming fluid required to ensure they are not subject to premature rotting and shorted usefulness,” he said he does not want to file a lawsuit but hopes AGA will take Wheatley’s complaints seriously.“I’ve never seen a situation where heads were left at somebody’s desk. That is unspeakable,” he said. “Those are people’s family members. They’re not a joke … They gave their body to donate it to science.”Wheatley looked into cameras, shaking, as he recounted his working conditions. He works as many as 12 hours a day, he said.“I’m beat up,” said Wheatley. “This job has severely weighed on me over the years.”He has three children — ages 11, 6 and 1 — and said he’s worried about his job security after submitting feedback to O’Connor. His family works in funeral homes and he said he got involved in the industry three years before starting at BriefingWeekdaysChicago Tribune editors' top story picks, delivered to your inbox each confirmed he hasn’t been at work since May 30. He’s still an employee and is taking paid time off, he said at the news said sometimes AGA receives bodies that are “twisted” or “emaciated.”“We accept every donor,” he said. “And we make a commitment to the donor that their bodies will be studied.”The issues at AGA need to be addressed before Wheatley will feel good about getting back to work, he said. Wheatley said since taking time off, his wrists and back are feeling better. The only thing that hasn’t improved is his anxiety, he said.“This is the only thing I can think about. I can’t even sleep. Just the only thing I can think about, running it over and over in my head. I can’t believe this is happening,” Wheatley action, people are going to rot away, Wheatley
Your characters are too nice. You can also argue, disagree politely, rudely, friendly-rudely. You can misunderstand. You can interrupt. You can complain and ask them to get to the point. You can have the speaker fail to remember something, say something false and then correct themselves, forget the point of what they were saying and fail to answer a question, or decide they don't want to tell the listener something after all. The listener, instead of being restricted to questions, can do what real people do What they heard reminds them of something else, and they talk about that. "I saw that almost that same thing in Chicago, it was funny as hell. These two guys ..." And off into a story. This approach is suitable for people traveling, with nothing to do but talk. In other words, make it longer. I think the mistake you are making is that you are trying to turn an information dump into a conversation instead, but it is just a soliloquy information dump or history dump from ONE character, with a prop character that is only there to prompt the next long chunk of soliloquy. The solution is to ditch the soliloquy altogether, or if it is necessary, make it longer so the conversation develops both characters. Remember, the reason we avoid information dumps in exposition or dialog is they are taxing on the reader's memory. They ask the reader to memorize a lot of stuff, and that takes them out of the story and into doing their homework. It is seldom important for the reader to understand all at once why your character is the way they are. You need to try and engineer your story and conversation so this kind of "backstory" is not told in a big block, but in a paragraph, and preferably as an explanation for some action or decision being taken right now. If the back story never influences any action or decision, then it probably isn't important. If it does, the time to reveal it depends on how unusual it is; the less unusual, the closer the reveal can be to the decision, and vice versa. For example, if you are turning down the shrimp because shrimp gave you food poisoning as a kid, you can do that at the point of the decision. A real conversation is not an interrogation as you know. Bob says something. That makes Charlie think of something to talk about. That makes Bob think of something to talk about, and the conversation meanders around. The replies are often questions IRL, but these are usually backward looking, to clarify something said, or get more information on something mentioned or claimed, they are usually NOT forward looking to lead the speaker into something entirely new. You can make a back-and-forth conversation without any questions, and that is one way to avoid the interrogation flavor.