Um, well I need to know your problem.. But sure, it can be four.
1\4 x 5=5\4 in other words 5 over 4.
Four thousand four hundred and thirty four
Four tenths.
Four thousand, four hundred.
The four words which stated the problem in Kurt Vonnegut's 1950 short story Epicac were "What can I do?". The unnamed narrator of the story is trying to find a way to convince Pat Kilgallen (his girlfriend), to marry him. After being repeatedly turned down, he asks Epicac (a computer) for advice in the form of the question "What can I do?".
down in the mouth
When building a story pyramid for Epicac, lines one and two should be about the main character. Line three should address the setting and line four, the main problem. Lines five through eight should address the first, second, and third event in the story and the last line should be the solution.
pulb
four hundred million see aint i a smart cookie
Um, well I need to know your problem.. But sure, it can be four.
farting very very badly
Some writing strategies that you may find helpful are organizing by order of importance and compare and contrast. Other strategies are stating a problem and offering a solution, and organizing topics consecutively.
1\4 x 5=5\4 in other words 5 over 4.
In words, 4.34 is four and thirty-four hundredths.
Operate the blower for at least four minutes
three and four hundredths... in words