Answer: The presidents XD the presidents don't care about us they just want the money and fame
Explanation:
https://brainly.pl/zadanie/13311167
Answer:
???
Explanation:
HURRY PLZZ BEFOR 11:59pm Read the story.
One Thousand Miles
“Gather around,” Abuela Lola yelled from the first floor. “It’s time for the annual family picture.”
Footsteps thundered from all corners of the house. Marco and Javier—cousins that Alejandro hadn’t seen since the last time that he and his mom had been in Los Angeles a year ago—got to the stairs before he did. He was unaccustomed to their energy, to the way they tackled each other and made boisterous comments over the dinner table. In his quiet house, the only noise during dinner came from the clink that his fork made against the plate.
“Hey, Alejandro,” they said as they knocked him to the side. He waited for them to pass and then walked gingerly down the steps of Abuela Lola’s house.
He always looked forward to when he and his mom visited her side of the family, but now, a few days after arrival, he had played soccer for more hours than he could count. All he wanted to do was find a puzzle somewhere quiet. But soon there would be the family picture, and then dinner, and even though he wanted to soak in the noise that he wouldn’t get for the rest of the year, it was too much right now.
“Alejandro! Venga,” Abuela Lola said as he rounded the corner to the kitchen. He looked for his mother in the crowd of relatives and calmed when he saw her towering above everyone else. He gave her the wide-eyed look that he always did when he felt overwhelmed. She laughed and put her hand in front of her mouth as though to squelch it.
Sandwiched between Marco’s elbow and Javier’s shoulder, Alejandro smiled until his mouth went numb. One pose, then another, then a silly pose, and finally, Tío Juan’s favorite: one where everyone jumped and was captured in suspension in the air for a fleeting second. When everyone scattered after the photo, Alejandro found his mom. His hands flew in front of his face, telling her about Marco and Javier. She nodded and signed back, telling him that it was only temporary.
He always wondered what these visits were like for his mother who was deaf—to be around moving mouths whose voices she couldn’t hear and music whose beat she could only feel through the floor when the volume was way up and her shoes were off. But there were other parts of the visit that had nothing to do with hearing—when she stood in front of the kitchen counter rolling balls of dough to make tortillas with Abuela Lola. Or when she held tiny tiles in front of her face to get the highest Scrabble score. After she inevitably won the game, she jumped up from the table and shouted, doing a little dance that Alejandro knew by heart.
He knew that these visits were different for her—that while Alejandro used these trips to absorb what it felt like to be in a noisy house, his mother got a chance to reconnect with family that she hadn’t seen in a year. To meet new babies that she’d only seen pictures of when the letters arrived at their house in Mexico. How she stayed up late rocking infants, tracing their delicate features with her finger, breathing in their baby smells. That for her, these visits closed the gap on the thousand miles that separated her from the family that had moved to Los Angeles ten years ago. "Sometimes," she had signed to Alejandro once, "the thousand miles feel like a world away."
“Alejandro, are you coming?” Javier called. He was standing in the backyard with a badminton racket in his hand.
Alejandro sighed. He wanted silence, wanted his quiet house with his mom, but he knew that would come sooner or later. For now, he had his extended family with their noise and their yelling and their laughter. He knew he would miss it when they were on the plane tomorrow morning. He peeked across the table at his mother who was looking back at him as though she knew just what he was thinking.
Go, she mouthed and signed at the same time.
“Coming,” he yelled back to Javier. He ran outside to join his cousins in one final game. “Who’s serving first?”(story)
How does the setting of the story affect Alejandro in "One Thousand Miles"?
A
The natural beauty of California makes Alejandro question where he and his mother live.
B The noise and bustle of Abuela Lola's house is initially exciting for Alejandro, but he gets tired of it quickly.
C The unfamiliar pace of life at his grandmother's home in Mexico makes Alejandro miss his own home in Los Angeles.
D The quiet and sedate nature of life in Los Angeles inspires Alejandro to interact with his cousins.
Answer:
Its C
Explanation:
Answer:
B
Explanation:
Which statement best expresses the central idea of this paragraph from Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl?
A. I started right away at the Montessori nursery school. I stayed there until I was six, at which time I started first grade.
B. In sixth grade my teacher was Mrs. Kuperus, the principal. At the end of the year we were both in tears as we said a heartbreaking farewell, because I'd been accepted at the Jewish Lyceum, where Margot also went to school.
C. Anne was very sorry to leave her grade school at the end of sixth grade Teachers in the Jewish Secondary School did not care much about Anne or her sister.
D. It is sometimes sad and difficult for students to move on to a new grade in school.
Her years in grade school were the happiest time of Anne's life before the war.
Answer:
Anne was very sorry to leave the Montessori Kindergarten at the end of the school year.
Explanation:
The answer is C
in the excerpt you read from Mukharji's A visit to europe, what assumption did the older village lady make about india?
In this book, Mr. T N. Mukharji relates to the account of his visit to Europe in 1886. He went as an agent of the Government of India to the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London.
What is context of Mukharji's book?
In this book, Mr. T. N. Mukharji recounts the narrative of his visit to Europe in 1886. He went as an agent of the Government of India to the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London.
The selection recounts to a story in which Mukharji was sitting at a café, close to an Indian family. The family needed to converse with him, yet accepted that they proved unable, as he wouldn't grasp them.
The creator then depicts their unexpected when he moved toward them and they understood he communicated in English smoothly.
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Answer: Everyone there knew each other
Explanation:
ANSWER ASAP I NEED THIS TODAY WILL BE GIVING BRAINLIEST TO FIRST CORRECT ANSWER.
In Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne refers to Mrs. Van Daan as a fatalist.
Anne initially describes Mrs. van Daan as a friendly, teasing woman, but later calls her an instigator. She is a fatalist and can be petty, egotistical, flirtatious, stingy, and disagreeable.
Mrs. van Daan
Den Mother
Okay, so Mrs. van Daan isn't actually a scout leader. But she's as protective as a mama bear when it comes to her precious baby boy. And later, she nurtures Anne quite a bit, especially during the periods of time that Anne doesn't feel like confiding in her own mom.
what is an antonym for wholehearted?
1. Sidetracked
2. Committed
3. Typical
4. Insincere
Answer:
it is 4. insincere
ACT 1 SCENE 1: The setting is a doctor's waiting room. Children are playing, a filter in an aquarium tank is humming, and several adults are reading magazines. The people are all waiting and have been waiting for an hour. ADULT 1 is very impatient and fidgety. He keeps looking at his watch and sighing repeatedly.
One of the children begins to cough.
ADULT 1: Sammy, come over here! If I have to tell you one more time! (Adult 1 looks at his watch again.)
SAMMY walks back to his father.
ADULT 2: (whispering to ADULT 3)
I wonder what why they're here.
ADULT 3: (whispering back to ADULT 2)
I don't know, but he looks pretty sick.
ADULT 2: (whispering to ADULT 3)
Well, whatever it is he's got, I don't want my kid to get it.
Suddenly, the door to the office opens, and a nurse calls out who the doctor will see next.
NURSE: Fargis, the doctor will see you now.
ADULT 3: That's me, nurse, but this gentleman (points to ADULT 1) should go ahead of me. His boy needs the doctor more.
ADULT 1 looks over to ADULT 3 and nods. ADULT 3 smiles back. The nurse calls for ADULT 1 and SAMMY. ADULT 1 and SAMMY walk to the back. The nurse begins to talk to them.
NURSE: So what seems to be troubling your son?
ADULT 1: Him? Nothing. I just came to see the doctor for a check up. But that was a really long wait.
adapted from "Duped at the Doctor's Office" by c.safos
Incident at an Intersection
by c.safos
ACT 1 SCENE 1: The setting is a street corner. A man and an older woman both stand waiting for the light to change. The man is talking on his phone and looks busy. He has a newspaper and an umbrella. When he hangs up the phone, he fidgets in his pockets and drops his wallet. When he picks it up, he moves his keys, phone, and wallet in his pockets and changes where they are placed. The old woman clutches her purse. She stands quietly next to him as cars speed past them. Even though the light hasn't changed, the old woman inches forward. The man grabs her and pulls her back to the curb just as a truck speeds past the area where she was stepping.
OLD WOMAN: Oh my!
The OLD WOMAN grabs the man by the hip to balance herself.
MAN: Are you okay?
OLD WOMAN: Help! Help! Someone! Police! I'm being robbed!
MAN: Excuse me?
OLD WOMAN: Help me! This man is trying to rob me! (She clutches her purse.)
MAN: Madame, I'm not trying to rob you! Please! I was trying to keep you from being run down!
OLD WOMAN: Help! Help! Help!
Just then, a police car drives by and parks to investigate the ruckus.
POLICEMAN: What's going on here?
OLD WOMAN: This man is trying to rob me.
MAN: Officer, there was a truck approaching. I tried to pull this woman back to the curb. . .
Suddenly, the light changes, and the OLD WOMAN crosses the street and enters a shop.
POLICEMAN: Alright sir, you'll have to answer a few questions. Do you have any ID?
The MAN reaches into his front pocket. He then reaches into his back pocket, then his front pocket.
MAN: I just had my wallet. (He remembers the OLD WOMAN grabbing his hip.) Officer, that old woman has robbed me!
How are the themes in these two dramas different?
A.
In "Incident at an Intersection," the reader feels badly about who gets fooled; in "Duped at the Doctor's Office," the reader does not feel badly about who is fooled.
B.
In "Incident at an Intersection," the old woman appears innocent; in "Duped at the Doctor's Office," the nurse does not appear innocent.
C.
In "Incident at an Intersection," the old woman accidentally fools the man; in "Duped at the Doctor's Office," the adult intentionally fools the others.
D.
In "Incident at an Intersection," the reader feels the policeman and the old woman are working together; in "Duped at the Doctor's Office," the reader feels that the adult is working alone.
Answer:
I would say A
Explanation:
No one is harmed in the first incident. The nice ADULTS just have to wait a little longer. But in the second incident, the man was robbed. So a reader doesn't feel bad about the first (nobody was harmed) and does about the second (a man who tried to help a lady was robbed.)
9
The diagram shows the arcs used to construct BĐ, given AABC.
4
А
D
5.
6
С
B
If m_ABC - 84 and m_CBD = (x + 6), what is the value of x?
7.
A
6
B.
18
8
С
36
D
42
9.
А
Please help me with these three english questions
where are the questions?
Which THREE sentences in this excerpt from Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart” show that the narrator feels his crime will not be discovered?
When I had made an end of these labors, it was four o'clock—still dark as midnight. As the bell sounded the hour, there came a knocking at the street door. I went down to open it with a light heart,—for what had I now to fear? There entered three men, who introduced themselves, with perfect suavity, as officers of the police. A shriek had been heard by a neighbour during the night; suspicion of foul play had been aroused; information had been lodged at the police office, and they (the officers) had been deputed to search the premises.
I smiled,—for what had I to fear? I bade the gentlemen welcome. The shriek, I said, was my own in a dream. The old man, I mentioned, was absent in the country. I took my visitors all over the house. I bade them search—search well. I led them, at length, to his chamber. I showed them his treasures, secure, undisturbed. In the enthusiasm of my confidence, I brought chairs into the room, and desired them here to rest from their fatigues, while I myself, in the wild audacity of my perfect triumph, placed my own seat upon the very spot beneath which reposed the corpse of the victim.
a. When I had made an end of these labors, it was four o'clock—still dark as midnight.
b. I went down to open it with a light heart,—for what had I now to fear?
c. A shriek had been heard by a neighbor during the night; suspicion of foul play had been aroused; information had been lodged at the police office, and they (the officers) had been deputed to search the premises.
d. I smiled,—for what had I to fear?
e. I bade them search—search well.
Answer:
d - i smiled, - for what had I to fear?
Explanation:
I went down to open it with a light heart, I smiled, —for what had I now to fear and I bade them search—search well. Thus, option b, d, and e is correct.
What is a crime?
A crime is an illegal conduct that is subject to judicial or other punishment. Present criminal law lacks a clear and widely agreed definition of what constitutes a crime, despite the fact that legislative classifications have been established.
This particular sentence as it is depicted now what have to sport clearly suggests that the narrator is thinking that there is nothing to be found and he has lost all hope.
When he smiles and says it or when he wants the labor to work at it suggests that thing has lost all his hope. And when he weds them and requests them to search for the evidence and to search well clearly such as that there is no evidence or anything that can be found out.
Therefore, option b, d, and e is the correct option.
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Im tryna look simple today
even tho i post this at 1 am tho
Answer:
post on insta not here
Explanation:
The secret of the fortune Wookiee climax
Answer:
if the fortune wookiee was a hoax or not
Explanation:
In the context of this story, how does power corrupt? How does the balance of power between the children and the man change throughout the story? (From "THE MAN IN THE WELL")
Answer and Explanation:
1. In "The man in the Well" we can see that the innocence and purity of children is completely corrupted by the power over someone's life. This is because this power fascinates and excites those who hold it, making them use it at their own pleasure without caring about the pain and suffering of other people. Children, in this short story, had the power to help the man who was inside the well, but making him wait and torture him gave them that sense of control, which corrupted them and made them do evil.
2. At the end of the story, the man finds out the name of one of the boys and this empowers him to speak directly to the boy, causing strong psychological pressure and being able to report what the boys did to him to anyone who pass near the well. This caused the boys to be disillusioned and afraid, who were totally controlled by the power that the man now wielded over them.
BRAINLEST + THANKS
Ever since he was a young boy, Eli loved to read because books helped him exercise his imagination.
A.)Simple
B.)Compound
C.)Complex
D.)Compound-Complex
Answer:
[tex]compound \: sentence[/tex]
Explanation:
[tex]because \: it \: is \: having \: two \: independent \: clauses \: and \: it \: is \: joined \: by \: a \: conjunction \: (because)[/tex]
The Leap
Which term best identifies how the narrator feels toward their mother?
A- confused
B- grateful
c- inferior
D- curious
Answer: if you search it, its mostly positive things so I'd say B, grateful
Answer:
b
Explanation:
The title shows me that maybe there is a jump in attitude
Would you rather live in Hawaii or live in Alaska?
Answer:
alaska always loved the cold
Explanation:
Answer:
I'd rather live in alaska because of the unique wildlife :)
Explanation:
I swear to God if someone either read or watch just mercy PLEASE answer this question I'm so lazy to watch and read helllppp.
Answer:
I honestly Agree with this.
Explanation:
The reason that I agree with this is because everyone deserves second chances. Sometimes people are not in the right mind space which causes them to act differently and do things that are wrong. People should be able to have at least a second chance to correct themselves or for redemption.
How do the narrator's spoken remarks to Fortunato compare with his internal feelings for the
man? Cite evidence from the text to support your response.
The spoken remarks by the narrator oppose his internal feelings for Fortunato in "The Cask of Amontillado", as he talks kindly to him but wants to kill the man.
Who is the narrator?Montresor is the narrator in "The Cask of Amontillado," a short story by Edgar Allan Poe. Montresor claims to be Fortunato's "friend" but, for some reason that remains unexplained, he has decided to kill Fortunato. Montresor says it is revenge after Fortunato insulted him, but he does not reveal what was said or done.
From the get go, the reader is told about such morbid plans on Montresor's part. He reveals his intentions and internal feelings in the very first paragraph. He is angry and wants revenge. But, as the story progresses, we see how devious Montresor is because he never shows any ill intention to Fortunato himself. Quite the opposite, Montresor fools Fortunato with his spoken remarks that show kindness and concern toward his friend. Take a look at the evidence below:
Internal feelings: I continued, as was my wont, to smile in his face, and he did not perceive that my smile now was at the thought of his immolation.Spoken remark: "Come," I said, with decision, "we will go back; your health is precious. You are rich, respected, admired, beloved..."It is our conclusion that Montresor's internal feelings and spoken remarks are contrary to each other.
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Use capacity and regulation in one sentence
Answer:
Their regulation of the beaker's capacity helped the scientists make sure it didn't overflow.
please help me with the rewriting exercise:
What should one do in such cases ?
-What should.....
What should I do in such a case. Hope that helps
importance of english language
which is a synonym for the word bombared
Answer:
inundate, swamp, flood, deluge, snow under, besiege, beset, belabor, bother, pester, plague, harass, badger, hound, hassle
Explanation:
hi I had no question but I just wanted to say hi. lol xD
Answer:
hello same here now it wants me to write more than 20 characters. done.
Answer:
hi
Explanation:
Comparing Events and Texts Quick Check
Which transition would be used to compare accounts of the same event?
O however
O instead
O likewise
O otherwise
Before you leave the country.
a-independent clause
b-dependent clause
c-phrase
Answer:
A
Explanation:
it has a noun and a verb
or
a subject and a predicate
Busloads of students rode into the South to challenge the segregation laws
there. What were these journeys called?
A. Ku Klux Klan
B. Interstate laws
C. Freedom rides
D. Bus boycotts
The election of Rutherford B. Hayes and the Compromise of 1877. Lead to the end of Reconstruction in the South. The correct option is B.
How did Rutherford B Hayes contribute to Reconstruction?Hayes was in charge of overseeing the end of Reconstruction, starting the initiatives that resulted in civil service reform, and making an effort to mend the rifts brought about by the Civil War.
In the informal, unwritten Compromise of 1877, which resolved the contentious 1876 presidential election, Republican Rutherford B. Hayes was elected president on the condition that he would withdraw federal forces from South Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana.
Therefore, The election of Rutherford B. Hayes and the Compromise of 1877. Lead to the end of Reconstruction in the South. The correct option is B.
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Who tried warning the town about the dangers of the Gestapo
Answer: Moishe the Beadle attempted to warn the Sighet Jews that the Nazis would finally attack their small town and violently destroy them. Moishe knew the danger from his first-hand experience in the Galician forest, where the Gestapo massacred a significant number of foreign Jews.
which sentence uses the connotation of the word crashed
Correct this sentence in passive voice to active voice
The late-arriving cashier was scolded by the manager.
I need the correct answer:( :(
Answer:
The manager scolded the late-arriving cashier.
Explanation:
Eight dollars ( is, are) the price of a movie this weekend. We have to put is or are *
Answer:
Eight dollars is the price of a movie this weekend.