The elements of a literary essay and their corresponding example are the following:
<h2>Thesis statement: </h2>
In Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare presents a strong female character in the form of Juliet's nurse.
<h2>Textual evidence: </h2>
"NURSE: Your lady mother is coming to your chamber: The day is broke; be wary, look about."
<h2>Topic:</h2>
The roles of female characters in "Romeo and Juliet."
One way to fix that sentence is to switch around the two phrases used; 'My mother and father are both scientists' and 'It must have been my destiny to become interested in biology.'
It must have been my destiny to spark an interest in Biology, as my mother and father are both scientists.
That's a way to fix that sentence used in your question.
Also, 'destiny' was spelled incorrectly.
This sentence may seem run on if you don't place a conjunction between the two phrases, or if the phrases are not switched.
If the sentence is to be used with a conjunction, it may end up like this....
My mother and father are both scientists, so it must have been my destiny to become interested in biology.
Or, you may just use a period, to change the two phrases used into two separate sentences.
Like this;
My mother and father are both scientists. For that reason, it must have been my destiny to become interested in biology.
ALSO, as you can see above, I have added a few words to the last sentence. Those three words, 'For that reason', give closure to the two sentences.
Hope this helped!
You should try going to his house, If he has snap you can look where he is on there. Or try calling his parents/siblings.
<em>~Kay</em>
WWhich two elements should be included with each visual aid in a technical document?
The following three lines indicate that all human beings are equal in the poet's eyes:
I am the poet of the woman the same as the man <em>(poet of both)</em>
And I say it is as great to be a woman as to be a man, (it is great to be both)
And I say there is nothing greater than the mother of men.
It is clear the use of comparisons of equality in the previous sentences from the poem of Walt Whitman.