It 6:30AM. I did not sleep. The last time I slept was yesterday afternoon where I took an 2hour nap? It took 6 hours to do that law brief. It was.. it is still so confusing. I'm reading my writing and it sounds like gibberish. It also ended up MUCH longer than anticipated. I can't help it. Due to the scarce number of evaluations in that course each mark counts, so how can I possibly risk no giving a sufficient explanation?
I'm going away for Super Council Leadership Retreat this weekend. I would be so much more excited if I didn't have a 1500 word economics essay to START researching for and possibly three tests to study for due the beginning of next week. I anticipate staying up again. I have to create and finalize my english creative writing assignment (600 words) in 24 hours.
G1 G1 G1. I'm supposed to go this afternoon. I'm actually worried. They all say it's common sense, but of course thats the one thing I kind of lack, now that is a moot statement. (A word that I came across in the law research. I searched up yesterday, but forgot and had to research it again. I shouldn't forget it now).
I'm going away for Super Council Leadership Retreat this weekend. I would be so much more excited if I didn't have a 1500 word economics essay to START researching for and possibly three tests to study for due the beginning of next week. I anticipate staying up again. I have to create and finalize my english creative writing assignment (600 words) in 24 hours.
G1 G1 G1. I'm supposed to go this afternoon. I'm actually worried. They all say it's common sense, but of course thats the one thing I kind of lack, now that is a moot statement. (A word that I came across in the law research. I searched up yesterday, but forgot and had to research it again. I shouldn't forget it now).
moot
1 [moot]–adjective
1.
open to discussion or debate; debatable; doubtful: a moot point.
2.
of little or no practical value or meaning; purely academic.
3.
Chiefly Law. not actual; theoretical; hypothetical.
–verb (used with object)
4.
to present or introduce (any point, subject, project, etc.) for discussion.
5.
to reduce or remove the practical significance of; make purely theoretical or academic.
6.
Archaic. to argue (a case), esp. in a mock court.
–noun
7.
an assembly of the people in early England exercising political, administrative, and judicial powers.
8.
an argument or discussion, esp. of a hypothetical legal case.
9.
Obsolete. a debate, argument, or discussion.
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