Academic Writing:Acknowledgements(1 / 3)

The d category be called "family and friends," namely, members of your family (father, mother, husband, wife, etc.) and your friends. Your family and friends may not be as academically aplished as your supervisors or advisors, but their help was equally important, becau it is them that shielded you from petty s of daily life so that you were able to trate on your academis. The moral support they gave you should not be regarded as inferior to the academic advice you received from tho who are intellectually superior. Help from family and friends sometimes may em to border orivial, as the following excerpt would illustrate, which though is not taken from an academic work: [......] For miracle-w - a category that includes produg a pencil out of thin air, paring two-thousand-year-old currencies, scuba diving in the Alexandrian harbor, and equably sharing an address with a writer - I owe an incalculable debt to Marc de La Bruyère. He makes the last line easiest, as none of the preg ones would have been written without him. (p.304) (Schiff, Stacy. (2010). Cleopatra: A life. New York, Boston, London: Little, Brown and pany.)

The d category be called "family and friends," namely, members of your family (father, mother, husband, wife, etc.) and your friends. Your family and friends may not be as academically aplished as your supervisors or advisors, but their help was equally important, becau it is them that shielded you from petty s of daily life so that you were able to trate on your academis. The moral support they gave you should not be regarded as inferior to the academic advice you received from tho who are intellectually superior. Help from family and friends sometimes may em to border orivial, as the following excerpt would illustrate, which though is not taken from an academic work: [......] For miracle-w - a category that includes produg a pencil out of thin air, paring two-thousand-year-old currencies, scuba diving in the Alexandrian harbor, and equably sharing an address with a writer - I owe an incalculable debt to Marc de La Bruyère. He makes the last line easiest, as none of the preg ones would have been written without him. (p.304) (Schiff, Stacy. (2010). Cleopatra: A life. New York, Boston, London: Little, Brown and pany.)