Answer:
Absolutely not because it teaches many useful and amazing in life!!!
NO
If reading is banned then what will you learn in language in life you have to read almost EVERYTHING! Then there wouldnt be amazing bools to read anymore because i love reading and the books that I read they are pretty funny and fun to read. :)
Which statement best expresses how the two passages are similar?
In both passages, the characters express concern about the future.
In both passages, men discuss the socially acceptable way to talk to women.
In both passages, couples discuss what they would do in an emergency.
In both passages, characters make generalizations that insult women’s intelligence.
Answer:D
Explanation:
Answer:
D, In both passages, characters make generalizations that insult women’s intelligence.
Explanation:
WILL MAKE BRAINLIEAST
Which excerpt from sea life best supports the idea that the narrator feels lonely in her new school?
O I don’t recall jimmy johnson having such a sweet smile in the fifth grade
O Maya hasn’t exactly ditched me, but we don’t have much to talk about anymore
O maybe that’s why all of my classmates have suddenly turned into a fish
O I wish I were popular like sandy quinn because she never has to worry about sitting In the lunchroom by herself
Answer:
4th choice
Explanation:
it implies that they eat alone at lunch
hope this helps
<3
; )
Answer:
d
Explanation:
10 interview questions i would ask to flood victom of recent raigad floods
When separating items in a list, a writer should
1. end the list with colon.
2. separate the items with colons.
3. add a comma after the "and" before the last item.
4. add a comma before the "and" before the last item.
Evaluating a Theme Park – Universal Studios Orlando
What is the overall theme of Universal Studios?
What type of Layout does Universal Studios have? (Loop or Icon Design)
There are 7 lands in Universal Studios. For each one, you will describe the theme, list the restaurants, list the rides, and list any restrictions (height/safety/etc.) for each ride.
Production Central
Theme
Restaurants
Rides and Ride Restrictions
New York
Theme
Restaurants
Rides and Ride Restrictions
San Francisco
Theme
Restaurants
Rides and Ride Restrictions
The Wizarding World of Harry Potter – Diagon Alley
Theme
Restaurants
Rides and Ride Restrictions
World Expo
Theme
Restaurants
Rides and Ride Restrictions
Woody Woodpecker’s Kidzone
Theme
Restaurants
Rides and Ride Restrictions
Hollywood
Theme
Restaurants
Rides and Ride Restrictions
What Live Shows or Special Events happen daily at Universal Studios?
Answer:
no
Explanation:
How does Esperanza Change over time? Analyze Esperanza responds to events early and late in the novel. Then compare her response to the two events. What do her responses show about her as a person?
Please this is End of Unit Essay help me please
Selfish-Giving (ex)
Explanation:
Did you read the book? I can help if you message me.
Please help NOWWWW!!!!
Answer:
Yes and No
Explanation:
B/c It may be thier fault and it may not be, it just depends. :)
Match the description to the term it represents.
1. Reading is 30 percent slower
2. Readers can digitally browse through a table of contents
3. This medium does not contribute to eye fatigue as much as others
online text
hard copy
Web document
Answer:hkjnmnml
Explanation:
In the passage, what does the phrase "the sun played hide-and-seek" mean?
Answer:
the sun periodically appeared and disappeared due to the clouds
Answer:
the aun periodically appeared and disappeared due to the clouds .
pls mark
me as
brilliant hehe
Which of the following sentences contains a gerund?
OA.
OB.
OC.
OD.
Babysitting is an absolutely tiresome job when you have to watch kids all evening.
Most babysitters find that kids are tough to look after if they have irregular bedtimes.
Parents enjoy the luxury of a babysitter after a long workweek.
Agreat babysitter can be very influential in a young child's life.
Which of the following sentences is most clearly threenarrated and third person omniscient point of view
A. Over 300 passengers were on the train that morning, and not one
of them knew where the train would end up.
B. She flipped through the old scrapbook; the mysterious man stood
in the background of every picture.
C. Everyone seemed to be impressed at the little dog's trick, but Rick
still felt like his dog could do better.
D. He choked down his meal, and wondered if anyone at the table
realized how much he hated collard greens.
SUBMIT
Answer:
B.
Explanation:
...
Answer:
Its A
Explanation:
How did the boy know that every single 300 passenger didn’t know where the train was going?
Read the letter.
A Letter from the Atlantic
Dear Hannah,
I’ve never seen so much water before—everywhere I look, all I can see around me is placid blue. I’m grateful for the calm water today because it enables me to ascend to the top level of the SS Frisia and look at the Atlantic Ocean that stretches before us until it meets the horizon. I feel the warm air on my face and smell the salty sea air, but there’s a pit in my stomach when I think about how different life in New York will be.
When we first set sail on August 21st, I watched until Hamburg became a miniscule speck in the distance. When I squinted and couldn’t see the familiar buildings with their smoke spewing into the air anymore, Papa told me to look the other way. “You can’t look back,” he said as he walked me to the other side of the ship, his strong arm supporting my shoulders. “Home is there now.” He pointed to a place that was shimmering waves of blue, and I had a hard time visualizing a home that was 6,000 kilometers of water. He told me to close my eyes and picture the skyline that would soon materialize on the horizon. I couldn’t even fathom 6,000 kilometers of water, just like I couldn’t fathom that our new home wouldn’t be Hamburg anymore.
Most of the days at sea have been turbulent; tall waves reach up from the bottom of the sea and smack into the ship, sending us to the ground whenever we are standing. We are jettisoned from one side of the ship to the other like billiard balls; we emigrants glance off one another before moving in separate directions. It was entertaining at first, but now the ship’s rocking motion makes me feel sick, so I descend back to the bottom level where my family’s room is. Through the tiny oval porthole, I watch as the rough water laps the glass.
We play games and read and sleep to pass the time—sometimes there’s violin music that drifts into our room at night. My brother and I step out into the hallway in our socks and dance to the fast beat together, and it makes the boat’s rocking seem bearable. Most nights, we practice some English words with one another peppered in with the German that I will soon use less and less. “I am from Germany,” I practice over and over again, elongating my mouth around vowels that are pronounced differently in English than in German. I still think in German, dream in German, feel German words fly off my tongue with a comfort and speed that I worry I’ll never feel when I speak English. What will happen to me if the English all around me displaces the German of my youth?
There are people on this ship from everywhere: The Kowalski family in the room next to ours is from Poland, while the Ivanov family on the other side is from Russia. We practice basic English with one another: “Good morning. How are you?” Behind the closed doors of strangers’ rooms, I hear unfamiliar consonant sounds making up the lyrics to lilting songs. I can only imagine that these melodies are about feeling adrift; though we come from different places, nostalgia and homesickness know no borders or boundaries.
When I write these letters to you, I wonder where you are and what you are doing. Are you still walking along the canals of the Speicherstadt the way we used to after school? Do you still hear the bells of St. Michael’s Church resounding through the air? Does the bakery on the corner still serve our favorite Brötchen when it comes right out of the oven?
I miss you more than I can say in this letter. Say hello to everyone for me and tell them that my family is doing well. By the time I get on land to mail this letter, I will be at Ellis Island!
Love,
Liesl
Read this passage from Liesl's brother's diary.
I draw pictures of New York in my diary every night. Every time I think about New York, my legs jitter with excitement. Everything will be so new and different! I practice English with everyone I know, even with my family who still wants to speak to me in German. I'm starting to think in English and can't wait until English is all I speak. People walk around here like they are sad, but I couldn't be happier. I think I've already forgotten my life in Hamburg. Ellis Island, here we come!
In the fourth paragraph of "A Letter from the Atlantic," Liesl wonders what will happen "if the English all around [her] displaces the German of [her] youth."
How does Liesl's viewpoint conflict with that of her brother?
Liesl fears she will not speak English well, while her brother is confident in his English skills.
Liesl worries about losing ties to her home culture, while her brother looks forward to joining a new culture.
Liesl plans to remain proficient in German, while her brother plans to embrace English.
Liesl is certain she will be able to embrace two cultures, while her brother thinks he must choose one.
Answer:
Liesl worries about losing ties to her home culture, while her brother looks forward to joining a new culture.
Explanation:
I need help with number 1-2
Answer:
1. Some scholars believe that Queen Elizabeth’s England was the Western world's first modern police state.
Rule: This sentence needs apostrophes because we add "s" to the singular, plural nouns, and indefinite pronouns.
2. It’s easy to poke fun at the clothing styles of the ‘70s and ‘80s.
Rule: This sentence needs apostrophes in front of the numbers "70s and 80s" because apostrophes replace missing numbers and letters in contractions.
Explanation:
Details included in answer...
from “Letter from Birmingham Jail” by Martin Luther King, Jr.
Before closing I feel impelled to mention one other point in your statement that has troubled me profoundly. You warmly commended the Birmingham police force for keeping “order” and “preventing violence.” I doubt that you would have so warmly commended the police force if you had seen its dogs sinking their teeth into unarmed, nonviolent Negroes. I doubt that you would so quickly commend the policemen if you were to observe their ugly and inhumane treatment of Negroes here in the city jail; if you were to watch them push and curse old Negro women and young Negro girls; if you were to see them slap and kick old Negro men and young boys; if you were to observe them, as they did on two occasions, refuse to give us food because we wanted to sing our grace together. I cannot join you in your praise of the Birmingham police department. It is true that the police have exercised a degree of discipline in handing the demonstrators. In this sense they have conducted themselves rather “nonviolently” in public. But for what purpose? To preserve the evil system of segregation. Over the past few years I have consistently preached that nonviolence demands that the means we use must be as pure as the ends we seek. I have tried to make clear that it is wrong to use immoral means to attain moral ends. But now I must affirm that it is just as wrong, or perhaps even more so, to use moral means to preserve immoral ends. Perhaps Mr. Connor and his policemen have been rather nonviolent in public, as was Chief Pritchett in Albany, Georgia, but they have used the moral means of nonviolence to maintain the immoral end of racial injustice. As T. S. Eliot has said: “The last temptation is the greatest treason: To do the right deed for the wrong reason.” I wish you had commended the Negro sit-inners and demonstrators of Birmingham for their sublime courage, their willingness to suffer and their amazing discipline in the midst of great provocation. One day the South will recognize its real heroes. They will be the James Merediths, with the noble sense of purpose that enables them to face jeering and hostile mobs, and with the agonizing loneliness that characterizes the life of the pioneer. They will be old, oppressed, battered Negro women, symbolized in a seventy-two-year-old woman in Montgomery, Alabama, who rose up with a sense of dignity and with her people decided not to ride segregated buses, and who responded with ungrammatical profundity to one who inquired about her weariness: “My feets is tired, but my soul is at rest.” They will be the young high school and college students, the young ministers of the gospel and a host of their elders, courageously and nonviolently sitting in at lunch counters and willingly going to jail for conscience' sake. One day the South will know that when these disinherited children of God sat down at lunch counters, they were in reality standing up for what is best in the American dream and for the most sacred values in our Judaeo-Christian heritage, thereby bringing our nation back to those great wells of democracy which were dug deep by the founding fathers in their formulation of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.
The chief purpose of paragraph 2, sentences 1 through 2 is to
A. address the opposition
B. express outrage at recent events
C. identify hardships faced by demonstrators
D. appeal to ethos
E. heckle authorities
Answer:
The chief purpose of paragraph 2, sentences 1 through 2 is to
D. appeal to ethos
Explanation:
Paragraph 2, sentences 1 through 2, appeals to ethos by establishing the credibility of Martin Luther King, Jr. to speak authoritatively on the subject under discussion. The two sentences balance the two sides of the argument about police conduct. Therefore, Martin Luther King, Jr. showed that he had the moral standing to speak about the happenings in Birmingham because he is fair (not biased) in his criticisms and accepts the right conducts of the police in public while deploring their conduct in private.
O A. It establishes the characters as heroic.
O B. It creates mystery.
O c. It gives the scene a joyous tone.
D. It shows that supernatural forces are at work.
Answer:
d
Explanation:
There are two people running for president in an election. One candidate is the current president and wants to get re-elected. What is one thing the media could do to hurt the president's chances of getting re-elected?
A.
cover stories showing the opposing candidate in a negative light
B.
run stories showing the president's good record in dealing with foreign policy
C.
cover stories that show both candidates in a balanced and fair light
D.
run stories that show how bad the economy has been under the current president
Answer:
D
Explanation:
It shows that the president sucks with economy
what does jankai realize by the end of the story
The thing that Jankai realize by the end of the story is option She values the time spent with her family in India.
What is the book of Life and Existence of Janaki about?This is known to be the best books to depict a woman's effort and adversity in order to succeed in her life.
It is one that stands for the issues and solutions that Indian lady encounters in her daily life. The reader will also see in this book how a girl from India is prevented from voicing her own ideas as well as been pressured into marriage by being forced to break up with her boy friend Arjun.
Therefore, The thing that Jankai realize by the end of the story is option She values the time spent with her family in India.
Learn more about family from
https://brainly.com/question/12397063
#SPJ1
Choose the sentence with the INCORRECT use of verb.Immersive Reader
(1 Point)
She had been waiting for her brother for two hours.
Ali had already left for the office when it started raining.
Anum is trying to reached the cricket stadium before the match begins.
Explanation:
last one as reached is in the past tense
who else just wants to slam their head into a table and cry
tell me why
What is the correct meaning of the word rotation?
The Earth's rotation affects the flying times of airplanes.
turning
gravity
speed
weather
Answer:
A rotation is a circular movement of an object around a center (or point) of rotation. The geometric plane along which the rotation occurs is called the rotation plane, and the imaginary line extending from the center and perpendicular to the rotation plane is called the rotation axis
Explanation:
Rotation is the process or act of turning or circling around something. An example of rotation is the earth's orbit around the sun. An example of rotation is a group of people holding hands in a circle and walking in the same direction.
PLZ ANSWER SOON! I HAVE TO GO AT 4:00 AND IT'S 3:45 FOR ME!!!!
When examining a relationship between characters, why do you think it is important to take facts from both sides?
because the author usually writes one "true" side, while the other is "false"
because then you can pick which side you prefer, and ignore the other one
because then you can get a well-rounded, unbiased understanding of the relationship
because the characters will both view the relationship in the exact same way
Answer: Maybe A or C but most likely A
Explanation:
Brainliest?
Answer
The answer is C I took the test!
Explanation:
what is the protagonist main motivation for the way he or she acts??
Answer:
The protagonist main motivation for the way he or she acts is explained below in details.
Explanation:
Personality motivation is the purpose of following a characters responses and behavior and activities in a provided picture or everywhere in a story. ... This motivation is at the center of personality characterizations and is important if your purpose is to write convincing and compelling personalities.
How does the author make connections between the different Cybathlon events?
Answer:
By providing background information about the pilots, including where they are from and how they overcame their disabilities. I hoped this helped!
Explanation:
Brainliest please?
Select the correct answer.
I'm Nobody! Who Are You?
by Emily Dickinson
I'm Nobody! Who are you?
Are you - Nobody - too?
Then there's a pair of us?
Don't tell ! they'd advertise - you know!
How dreary - to be - Somebody!
How public - like a Frog -
To tell one's name - the livelong June -
To an admiring Bog!
In Emily Dickinson's "I'm Nobody! Who Are You?" does the speaker advocate keeping your identity public or private?
A.
public identity, so you're popular and admired
B.
private identity, so you're happy just being yourself
C.
no identity, so you're not punished for going against the norm
Baseball player Mark McGwire broke the home run record in 1998, yet later admitted to using
pertormance enhancers. In recent years many athletes have done likewise.
Do you think that steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs should be more strictly
regulated? Why or why not?
Answer:
The correct answer is True
Explanation:
Mark McGwire is a former baseball player; during this career as a professional, McGwire stood out due to his excellent performance and records. Indeed, McGwire broke many records, this included the record for most home runs in a season he broke in 1998.
However, years later Mark McGwire was determined to be part of a group of baseball players that had used drugs to enhance their performance (doping) and in 2010 McGwire admitted for many years (around a decade) he used steroids to improve his performance; this included the season in 1998 during which he broke the record. Thus, the statement about McGwire is true
How can we promote and extend effective practices, especially in schools with disadvantaged backgrounds?
Socratic app
it will help you
A theme is ___ in concept.
positive
direct
indistinguishable
vague
Answer:
indistinguishable
Explanation:
they tend to stand out ( having an over all THEME) making them indistinguishable
help ill give brainliest!
1. Idiom
2. Oxymoron
I hope this helped! :))
Answer:
OnomatopoeiaPunExplanation:
Number one is onomatopoeia because it includes words to describe the "tone" of an object ("...crackling fire...").
Number two is a pun because it makes a joke between something being photographic but it not being able to develop (like photos do when taken).
I hope this makes sense! If anything's wrong, let me know, but they should be correct. :)
Please help me answer the multiple choice question. I have attached a PNG with the question in it. Please give me a explanation for the answer.
1 C
2 B&C
3 D
4 A
5 B
6 B
Maybe
Yolanda is participating in a group discussion. Several of her peers have spoken before her, and she completely
disagrees with them.
Which response is the most positive approach?
O She should tell the other participants that they do not know what they are talking about.
O She should ask the moderator to stop the others from talking, because they have no evidence.
She should walk away from the discussion, because the other participants are clearly hopeless.
She should look at her notes to find an example that shows exactly why she disagrees.
she should look at her notes to fin an example that show exactly why she disagrees
Answer:
D.
Explanation: