Q: Give hot or cold water a boost by squeezing lemon juice into it. Just cut a lemon in half and squeeze the juice from the lemon half into your cup. Or slice a lemon into wedges, freeze the wedges, and then add them to your water instead of adding ice cubes.  If you don't have a citrus juicer, remove seeds from lemon slices before freezing them by extracting as many as possible with a fork. To avoid getting seeds in your water when squeezing a lemon half, hold the cut side upwards, so the juice will drip down the sides of the lemon when you squeeze it. Pour 1 c of white, granulated sugar and 1 c of water into a small saucepan and mix them together until they simmer. Squeeze 4-6 lemons to produce approximately 1 c of lemon juice. Mix the simple sugar and lemon juice together and refrigerate for 30-40 minutes.  Feel free to adjust the amount of sugar. If you prefer a tart, less-sugary beverage, cut the sugar down to ¾ c. Add soda water to this mix to create a lemon soda. . In a teapot, add slices of lemon and the tea leaves or herbs of your choosing. Add honey or sugar if you want a sweet tea. Pour boiling water over your ingredients and let sit for about five minutes. Strain and serve immediately for a warm, pleasant beverage.  Drink lemon tea with honey to soothe a sore throat. Boil slices of ginger for ten minutes, add lemon, and drink hot or cold. . Lemons are a staple of any bar. Try making classic drinks like the lemon drop, gin fizz, or whisky sour. Add a wedge of lemon to a pale lager or other light beer.
A: Squeeze some lemon in water for a low-calorie beverage. Make homemade lemonade. Brew tea from lemons Whip up some lemony cocktails

Q: If you have a small problem area, like a mosquito bite or slight sunburn, the antioxidants in old teabags can potentially help you heal faster. The epigallocatechin-3-gallate or ECGC found in tea is also an anti-inflammatory. Polyphenols reduce redness, and tannins and theobromine reduce pain.  Apply a wet used teabag to the problem area and let sit until dry to benefit from these particular properties. If you are not yet satisfied with the results, you can re-wet the teabag and use it again in the exact same way. Injuries or problem areas for which this is potentially helpful include blisters, razor burn, sunburn, poison ivy, recent injection sites, acne, plantar warts, bruises, cold sores, bug stings or bites and even gums which are still bleeding from a lost baby tooth. The caffeine found in tea can help shrink blood vessels around your eyes, reducing the appearance of dark circles, while the tannins help to improve your circulation. Refrigerate the used teabags for 20 minutes; the cooler temperature of the teabags will help reduce swelling. Make sure they are still damp, but not soaking wet, and apply them to your eyes for 15-20 minutes. Add a couple of lavender, peppermint, or chamomile teabags to a hot foot soak or face-steaming bowl and the antioxidants will soften your skin while the enticing aromas help deal with any problematic odors in the area.  You can experience a similar effect over your entire body by adding a couple more of them to an entire bathtub full of hot water. This can also improve the health of your hair and scalp by way of antioxidants and vitamins, like vitamins C and E. Picking a smell that you particularly enjoy can have aroma-therapeutic effects to boot.
A: Treat minor injuries. Soothe tired eyes. Add them to your foot soak, face steam, or bath.

Q: If you have a well-trained and obedient dog, you could try to make him/her sit and then hide some treats around in the room where you are. Then when you say "Go"! The dog will run around, trying to find all the treats! Remember to hide the treat a place your dog can reach. Remember the game you used to play when you was a kid? Maybe your kids play it, but it's not just for humans! Like the previous step, this requires an obedient and well-trained dog. Make the dog wait sitting down somewhere, facing a wall or better yet, a corner. Then you hide! Be careful, sometimes the dog peeks! And don't make too much noise hiding. Then call the dogs name and wait for the dog to find you! Note that this play works the best if you are alone with your dog at home, because other people can distract the dog. This requires a garden and an old sheet. Find an old sheet that you don't use, and go out to your garden with your dog. Now, run around with the sheet behind you and watch your dog go crazy, trying to catch it! This requires a laser pointer. Use the laser pointer to make your dog (or cat) go mad! Point it around on the floor, and at the walls and watch your pet trying to get a hold of it! Don't point the laser at your pet's eye though, it can harm the dog.
A: Hide the treats. Hide 'n Seek. Chase the sheet! The moving red dot game.

Q: Citing an online journal is similar to citing a print journal, with a few exceptions:  Include website title. Specify "web" instead of "print." Include date website was accessed. In practice, the above structure should lend itself to a citation that looks like this: Last, First M. "Article Title" Journal Title Series Volume. Issue (Year Published): Page(s). Website Title. Web. Date Month Year Accessed.
A:
Follow the basic style of MLA formatting in online journals. Make it look like this.