It depends what kind of poem that you are writing.
A critique group can be a fun way of getting and giving feedback about a piece of writing. You can learn a lot, both by getting criticism of your writing, and by trying to spot mistakes in someone else's writing. A good critique group can become a group of good friends, as well, and a group of people you trust to tell you what's working and what's not.
Good musical ear Good musical training TONS OF PRACTICE
no becuase their is a lot of bugs and wild animals.
just about any laptop would be good for writing. I would stay away from the netbooks, for the simple fact they are small and the keyboard is smaller
A good paragraph structure must be contain the topic on which you are writing about, it should also be started by giving a paragraph which the first alphabet must begin with a capital letter
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill website has a very good writing centre which includes lots of information about group writing. There is a handout that you can print out which has a lot of information about collaborative writing.
writing everything down in your fitness log.
In academic and professional writing, widows and orphans refer to words or lines of text that are left alone at the beginning or end of a paragraph or page. Widows are lines of text that appear at the top of a page with the rest of the paragraph on the next page, while orphans are lines that appear alone at the bottom of a page. It is considered good practice to avoid widows and orphans for better readability and aesthetics in writing.
good lines go in sitcoms, bad lines go in your nose.
they arent good but they like the music industry so they keep writing songs people like they will stay in buisness
To switch lines at school when a teacher lines you up, it is probably a good idea to first ask permission to switch lines. If you keep getting caught trying to switch lines, you will need to stay in your own line until the teacher lets you switch.