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Topics |
http://www.WritingResource.info/ |
Adventures in
Writing* |
Links and
references |
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Active & Passive Voice |
Active or Passive Voices |
173, 227, 411, 246 |
Active vs. Passive Voice |
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Adjectives (see nouns) |
Adverbs Verbs |
adverbs: 412, verbs and adverbs: 173,227-232, 236,
239-246, 411 |
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adverbs Adverbs |
Adverbs |
What is an Adverb? |
Adjective/ Adverb Quiz Quiz |
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Guide
to Apostrophes |
Apostrophes... |
270,334,409 |
Quiz Apostrophes |
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Apostrophe Catastrophe |
The Apostrophe & possessives |
The Apostrophe |
Quiz #2 Apostrophe Quiz 3 |
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Articles |
Articles |
221 |
Article Use: (OWL) |
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Articles/Definite/Indefinite |
PRACTICE:
ARTICLES A/AN |
Using Articles |
Quiz Quiz 2 Quiz 3 Quiz 4 |
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Bias Logical Fallacy |
Satire Propaganda, what
is it? |
Poetry |
Political
Cartoons |
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Business and English |
Business vocabulary & grammar |
414 |
Business English |
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Capitalization Rules |
More
capitalization links |
286-293 |
Capital Letter - Quiz |
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Capital Letters Capitalization
Quiz Capitals,
Italics, Punctuation English: Capital Letters When and where to use caps |
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Capital Letters [Printable Handout} Capital Letters in Titles |
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Colons and Semi-colons |
Colons
and semicolons
325-326, 408 colons |
semicolons colon |
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Commas Play
comma game |
Three
comma rules! All commas rules! 189,313,406 Comma Use |
Commas quiz Quiz 2 quiz 3 |
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Computers |
www.ComputerResource.org/ |
113, 143-147 |
Writing with Computers |
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Search Engines, Robots, & Spiders |
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Conversation Resource |
American
Accent Training |
American Pronunciation |
Useful Expressions |
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Conclusions |
Conclusions |
88 |
writing conclusions |
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Dangling participles |
Dangling Participles |
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Gerunds |
Gerunds/Participles/Infinitives |
239 Gerunds and Infinitives |
ESL Quiz - Gerund |
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Essay:
Compare&Contrast |
Fine-Tune
Essay Essays |
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Proofreading and Editing |
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Gerunds & Infinitives |
Interactive verbal quiz #2 |
ESL Quiz Gerund or Infinitive |
Gerund & Infinitive Quiz |
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Hyphen &nbs`;Using
Hyphens |
The Hyphen |
336, 409 Rules for hyphens |
Hyphen Hyphenated
Adjectives |
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Idioms and Slang |
Idioms and Slang |
The Idiom Connection |
Self-Study Idiom Quizzes |
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Logic |
Logic |
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Misplaced modifiers |
Dangling
Modifiers |
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Nouns and Adjectives |
Nouns and
Adjectives |
410, 249-252 |
Crossword Puzzle - Adjectives |
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Outlining & Prewriting |
Prewriting |
Outline 86,
99 Prewriting 35-40 |
Planning (Invention) |
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Paragraphs |
Paragraphs
& Transitions |
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Paragraphs |
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Parallel Structure |
mostly punctuation |
298-301 |
Parallel Structures |
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Parts of Speech |
Dipthongs |
410-413 |
The Parts of Speech |
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Parts Of Speech |
Part of Speech Quiz |
Parts of Speech |
Grammar - Parts of Speech |
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Periods |
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311, 406 |
Period PowerPoint |
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Plurals |
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266 |
English plural |
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Plural reference: Encyclopedia/English plurals |
269 Possessives w/self-tests |
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Prepositions are essential |
Prepositions |
256, 412 |
QUIZ |
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Good to look up
prepositions: about, at, by, for, from, in, of, on, to, with ...and
use them in sentences (then the rest) |
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**Pronouns |
Pronouns |
123,166,180,212,257,410-411,448 |
More on Pronouns |
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Proofreading & Editing |
Proofreading and Editing |
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Punctuation Punctuation |
Punctuation2 Punctuation3 |
310-313, 326-334,
406-409 |
Punctuation Test |
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Quotations & Punctuation |
Actual Quotation
Resource |
329,408 Quotations & Punctuation |
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Quotations/ Punctuation |
Punctuating & Indenting Quotes |
Punctuating Quotations |
Quiz on Using Quotation Marks |
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Reading Resource |
Reading List Proofreading |
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Research Resumes |
Newspapers News Oregon
News |
Alternative News Careers |
Library Blogs Finance |
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Rewriting Edit & Rewrite |
Prewriting Practical Tips |
13, 145 |
PDF] Culling common errors |
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Rhetoric |
www.WritingResources.org/ |
44-69 |
Rhetoric, linguistics & writing |
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Rhetoric:
More! Syntax |
Rhetoric: What is it? Rhetoric |
47 Conclusions |
The Rhetoric Page |
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Rhetoric is the art of
communication which allows us to persuade or communicate ideas. |
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Run-on Sentences |
Run-on Sentences |
188 |
Quiz: RUN-ON
SENTENCES |
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Sentence
Structure (SVO) |
Sentence Patterns & Syntax |
172-200 |
Sentence Structure |
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Spelling Spelling |
Spelling |
262- 266, |
Common Errors in Spelling |
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Spelling Rules |
Spelling Test |
271, 273 |
ESL
Quiz - Spelling spell |
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Syntax |
Syntax |
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Tense Verb TenseChart |
Tenses Verb Tense Tutorial |
228-230, 232,245 |
Sequence of Tenses |
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Using Verb Tenses |
EnglishOntheRun-Grammar |
English tenses |
tense ESL Quiz-Verb Tenses |
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They're contraction There location Their possessive |
282 |
Confused/Misused Words |
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**
"This" and "that" |
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123,166,180,212,257,410-411 |
ESL Quizzes - Pronouns |
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The Six W's |
The Six W's |
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Thinking in English |
Wisdom Translation ESL |
219-285 Conjugation |
Pronunciation |
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Transitions |
Using Transitions Transitions |
116-130 |
Organization Transitions |
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Verbs |
Verbs |
173,227-232,
239-246, 411 |
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Vocabulary Resources |
Vocabulary Page Word List |
162-170 |
Business English-Vocabulary |
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vocabulary |
BUSINESS ENGLISH Finance |
Business Vocabulary |
Business Speaking Skills |
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wordiness |
wordiness |
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Writing Writing Resource |
Writing Skill Writing Editing |
11, 145 Web Resources |
26 Rules for Writing Well |
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Writing your resume |
Topics Subjects More Topics |
Scanning,
Skimming, & Organizing Study Skills |
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Writing
letters to editors |
Writing Exercises |
Methods of writing evaluation Writing Well Writer's Resource |
Vocabulary
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#5
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#6
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#7
accentuate - v
allotment - n
antiquate - adj
banister - n
recoup - v
satchel - n
selectivity - n
discordant - adj
revered - v
anomaly - n |
#8
anthology - n
antidote - n
barometer -n
biology - n
reconnaissance - n
saunter - v
gratification - n
sonnet - n
chronic -adj
lucid -adj
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#9
bazaar- n
cardigan - n
ecology - n
quint -n
refract - v
rubella -n
sabbatical -n
ludicrous - adj
insidious - adj
interim -adj
|
#10
capitalism -n
cartography - n
hemisphere - n
quintet - n
reformatory - n
ruckus - n
sabotage -v
intrepid - adj
fortuitous - adj
distraught -adj |
#11
cappuccino - n
caustic - adj
cellulose - n
quotient -n refraction - n
rumen - n
saboteur - n
divulge -v
specious -adj
doleful - adj
|
#12
carcinogen -n
carousel -n
hemorrhage - v
quorum -n
refurbish -v
ruminant - n
septum - n
flout - v
writhe - v
zenith - n
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#13
celestial - adj
circumvent - v
hipster - n
plague - n
regatta - n
romance -n, v
serene -adj
mandible - n
despicable - adj
precluded -v |
#14
cayenne - n
centrifuge - n
hydroponics - n
preamble - n
regiment - n
rosin - n, v
serpentine - adj
destitution - n
racism - n
apartheid - n |
#15
centigrade - adj
ceremonious -adj
kipper - n
placard - n
quiche - n
relativity - n
rouse - v
sexism - n
spastic - adj
apparition -n |
#16
cerebrum - n
chasm - n
coagulate - v
litmus - n
precursor - n
regurgitate - v
rotunda - n
shilling - n
derogatory - adj
hamlet - n
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#17
cognition - n
condone - v
lobotomy - n
madrigal - n
relinquish - v
rival -n
simulate - v
loquacious - adj
archaic - adj
grandiloquent - adj
|
#18
collaborate - v
confluence - n
luscious - adj
plagiarism - n
reluctant - adj
renounce - v
sincerity - n
pandemonium - n
nemesis - n
grotesque - adj |
#19
commemorate - v
condense - v
Lucerne - n
magenta - n
reminisce - v
rendezvous - v
silo - n
haggard - adj
observation - n
sporadic - adj |
#20
commission -n
concur - v
corpuscle - n
magma - n
remorse - n
renaissance - n
silage - n
spontaneous - adj
combustion - n
edification - n |
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#21
corona - n
opaque -adj
phylum - n
reparation - n
skepticism - n
skittish - adj
stark - adj
trepidation - n
stomach - n
exorbitant - adj
|
#22
estate - n
omnivorous - adj
predestine - v
repercussion - n
rigger - n
skewer - n
slouch - n, v
paradox - n
verbatim - adj
malaise -n |
#23
elegant - adj
ordeal - n
predispose - v
repertoire - n
replenish - v
slander - n, v
sleuth - n, v
strategy - n
stratum - n
figment - n |
#24
publishing - v
orchestra - n
preferential - adj
reprimand - v
repugnant - adj
slather - v
sluice - n
stratosphere - n
nostalgic - adj
brazen - adj
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#25
nationalize - v obligate - v
phobia - n
premonition - n
smattering - n, adj
snobbish - adj
momentous - adj
precocious - adj
resuscitate - v
scathing - adj
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#26
necrosis - n
obsession - n
photosphere - n
smelt - v
sociability - n, adj
devoid - adj
deviation - n
retract - v
didactic - adj
aesthetic -adj
|
#27
neutrality - n oceanography - n
omission - n
progressive - adj
socialism - n
fiasco - n
capitulate - v
tenable - adj
stubborn - adj
subcutaneous - adj
|
#28
nourish - v
odoriferous - adj
photosynthesis - n
socialist - n, adj
obnoxious - adj
gamut - n
strudel - n
stupendous - adj
subjective - adj
subterranean -adj
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#29
ophthalmology - n
oxidize - v
grope - v
quantitative - adj
soiree - n
solicit - v
succulent - adj
synonym - n
allegation - n
apathetic - adj
|
#30
opine - v
origami - n
phagocyte - n
solace - n
solicitor - n
summon - v
superstition - n
synopsis - n
commiserate - v
nebulous - adj
|
#31
philanthropy - n
proprietary - adj
quarantine - v
solarium - n
solidarity - n
surmount - v
systole - n
façade - v
scrutinize - v
transient - adj - n
|
#32
phlegm -n
provocation - n
solemn - adj
solitaire - n
sustenance - n
syllabus - n
invective - n
aveoli - n
tenuous - adj
transcend -v
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#33
trajectory - n
acquisition - n
decadence - n
covert - adj
debacle - n
inhibition - n
abulate - v
tactics -n
tangent - n
flirtation -n
|
#34
cursory - adj
mundane - adj
exemplary - adj
superfluous - adj
superficial - adj
tactile - adj
taint - v
talon - n
tangible - adj - n
federation - n |
#35
taciturn - adj
taffy - n
tectonics - n
topography - n
flotilla - n
ulna - n
unabridged - adj
undulate - v
vagabond -n
ventricle - n |
#36
tantalize - v
tarsus - n
template -n
fathom - n - v
ulterior -adj
unilateral -adj
variant -adj - n
veranda - n
diagnose - v
consolidate - v |
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- [Being Unprepared] Because you
have been sick, out of town, busy at work,
or working on other homework, you didn't
have as much time to study for an important
test as you needed. Everyone going to school
has been in this situation. Think of a
specific test that you took that you felt
unprepared for and narrate the events. Tell
your readers about the preparation that you
were able to do, the reasons that you didn't
get to prepare as well as you wanted, taking
the test, and any significant events that
happened after you took the test. Your paper
should help readers understand what it felt
like to be unprepared.
- [Lightbulb Moment] Think of an
experience when you realized that you
suddenly understood an idea, a skill, or a
concept you had been struggling with -- it
might be something related to a class that
you took or a specific athletic skill you
were trying to perfect. For instance, you
might think about trying to understand how
to identify iambic pentameter in a poem or
how to complete a Taylor Series problem in
your Calculus class. Or you might consider
trying to perfect your free throws and
suddenly understanding how your
follow-through was affecting your success.
Write a narrative that tells the story of
your movement toward understanding. How did
you finally come to understand? What changed
your perceptions and gave you a new
understanding? Your paper should help
readers understand how you felt to struggle
with the idea or skill and then to
understand.
- [Childhood Event] Choose a vivid
time from your childhood — You might think
of the first time that you rode a school
bus, of a time when you went to the
principal's office, the first A you earned
on a test or paper, earning money to buy
something that you really wanted, and so on.
Narrate the events related to the childhood
memory that you've chosen so that your
readers will understand why the event was
important and memorable.
- [Achieving a Goal] Think of a
time when you achieved a personal goal — you
might have finally completed a marathon or
triathlon, or you might have bettered your
score on the SATs or another test, or you
might have learned how to use a piece of
software like Microsoft Word or Excel. Tell
your readers about the story of how you met
your goal. Be sure that your readers
understand why the goal is important to you.
- [The Good and the Bad] Think
about an event in your life that seemed bad
but turned out to be good. Maybe you got
injured and while you were waiting for your
broken leg to heal, you learned how to use a
computer. What makes the event change from
bad to good may be something that you
learned as a result, something that you did
differently as a result, or something that
happened that wouldn't have occurred
otherwise. Tell the story of the event that
you experienced and help your readers
understand how an event that seemed negative
turned out to have valuable consequences.
- [Being a Teacher] Teaching
someone else how to do something can be
rewarding. Think of a skill that you've
taught someone else how to do. Perhaps you
taught someone else how to swim, showed
someone how to bake a souffle, or helped
someone learn how to study more effectively.
Think about the events that made up the
process of teaching the skill, and narrate
the story for your readers.
- [Changing Places] Every place has
things that change — sometimes as the result
of economics, sometimes because different
people are involved, and sometimes for no
clear reason that you know about. Think of a
change to a place that you know well.
Perhaps the local grocery store you grew up
with as Smith and Bros. Grocery was bought
out by a regional chain like Food Lion or
Winn Dixie. Maybe the First National Bank of
Smithburg suddenly becomes NationsBank.
Perhaps the change was more personal -- an
older sibling moves out of the house and
your family changes the room to a guest room
or an office. Think of a specific change and
narrate the events that occurred. Readers
should know the details of the change, and
they should know how you feel about the
changes that occurred.
- [Personal Rituals] Describe a
personal ritual that you, your friends, or
your family have. Think about the personal
steps that you always go through when you
prepare for an exam. Do you sit at a desk,
spread books and notes across your bed, or
use the kitchen table? Do you have to have
something to drink...soda, water, jolt?
There are numerous things that we do for
which we create our own personal rituals.
Choose one event — studying for a test,
writing a paper, dressing and warming up
before a game, or preparing and having a
special family meal. Narrate the events that
take place when you complete your ritual so
that your readers understand the steps that
the ritual includes and why you complete
them.
- [Standing Up] Choose a time when
you did something that took a lot of nerve,
a time when you didn't follow the crowd or a
time when you stood up for your beliefs.
Perhaps your friends were urging you to do
something that you were uncomfortable with
and you chose not to cave into peer
pressure. Maybe you took a stance on a
political issue that was important in your
community, or you might have Whatever you
choose, think about the details of the event
and write a story that tells about what
happened. Your narrative should show your
readers why you decided to make a stand or
try something that took nerve, give
specifics on the events, and share how you
felt after the event.
- [Disagreeing] Think of a time
when you disagreed with a decision that had
been made and did something about it. The
decision might have been made by someone you
know personally — your Biology teacher
announced a new policy to grade for spelling
and grammar on your quizzes and homework, or
an older family member decides to cancel a
subscription to a magazine that you liked to
read. You might have responded by discussing
your concerns with your principal or dean,
or you might have decided to get a part-time
job to earn enough money to buy the magazine
yourself. Or the decision could have been
made by someone you never met — perhaps your
school board decided to change the lines in
your school district so that you would have
to go to a different school, or your state
legislature has passed a bill that you
disagreed with. Your response might have
been to write a letter to the editor, to
your state representative, or to the school
board. Whatever happened, your job is to
write a paper that narrates the events that
occurred -- from the decision that was made
to your response. Be sure that your paper
gives enough details that your readers
understand why you disagreed with the
decision and why you felt that your response
was appropriate.
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