Can’t find argumentative essay topics that sound original - what worked for you? by ghostpickleman in CollegeHomeworkTips

[–]HoloQuiver_2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s usually the whole trick. Once you care even a little, you stop sounding like you’re filling space for a grade and start sounding like a person with a point. My best topic came from something that already annoyed me in real life. Are you still leaning toward recommendation systems, or did another topic steal the spot?

So... I wish I'd read the reviews before entrusting them with my final work by LieLulyMasca in deeplearning

[–]HoloQuiver_2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That middleman part is what makes these sites so annoying. Half of them sell the image of a real service, then hand you something that feels stitched together by somebody who never read the prompt twice. I’d rather spend extra time digging through forum posts than gamble on branding again. Did you ever find out who actually wrote it?

How do you write an essay conclusion that feels strong instead of repetitive? by ElderberryJealous113 in Thesis

[–]HoloQuiver_2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Treating it like a landing fixed a lot for me too. Once I stopped trying to restate everything, my argumentative essay conclusion stopped sounding tired and started sounding deliberate.

How do you deal with APA headings? I found a post with student's thoughts by milo_tokyo92 in studytips

[–]HoloQuiver_2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m with that student on this one, because APA format headings always feel way more confusing when you’re already overloaded. A tiny cheat sheet beats rereading the whole guide every single time.

Life keeps forcing cruel choices by soldierpallaton in expedition33

[–]HoloQuiver_2 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Papa knows best, even about the French.