Your kother
true,
Citations
the pourpous of twilight is to entertain readers. just the same as harry poter/
readers get to vote on the information covered
Suspension of disbelief
To promote suspension of disbelief, the author can create a well-developed and consistent fictional world, establish clear rules and logic within the story, and provide vivid and detailed descriptions to help readers immerse themselves in the narrative. Additionally, the author can also build complex and relatable characters that readers can empathize with.
An author can maintain consistency in the story's world, characters, and rules, create engaging and well-developed characters, employ vivid descriptions and sensory details to immerse readers in the setting, and build a captivating and believable plot that keeps readers engaged and invested.
Nikolai Sergeevich Fudel' has written: 'A modern Russian reader for technical college students [by] L.M. Astakhova [and others]' -- subject(s): Russian language, Readers (Technology)
Readers' is the possessive plural of reader.
readers'
The possessive form for the plural noun readers is readers'.I think that the readers' interest will be high.
Lucille Richard has written: 'Un ami' -- subject(s): French language, Readers (Primary), Readers 'Les pilotes' -- subject(s): French language, Readers (Primary), Readers 'La chatte Mimine' -- subject(s): French language, Readers (Primary), Readers 'La salade de fruits' -- subject(s): French language, Readers (Primary), Readers 'Le chat sale' -- subject(s): French language, Readers (Primary), Readers
No, parrots are not mind readers.
A newspaper entertains readers and also provides information that readers find interesting and pleasing.
Pat Edwards has written: 'Rosie's new pet' -- subject(s): Readers 'A marvellous mix' -- subject(s): Readers 'Fred's mess' -- subject(s): Readers 'Atishoo' -- subject(s): Readers 'Over and under and up and around' -- subject(s): Readers 'Clean up your room' -- subject(s): Readers 'Troubadour' -- subject(s): French language, Textbooks for foreign speakers, Readers, Study and teaching (Primary), English 'Have you seen Stanley?' -- subject(s): Readers 'Poor rabbit' -- subject(s): Readers 'Stanley goes to school' -- subject(s): Readers 'M and M and other stories' 'Bony-legs and other stories' 'Goodnight' -- subject(s): Readers 'Who asked the ants?' -- subject(s): Readers 'Pancakes!' -- subject(s): Readers 'Fred's birthday' -- subject(s): Readers
by using scientific language that shows he knows what he is talking about