Answer:
attendance and envelope
Explanation:
According to Fitzgerald, literature includes universal themes that can connect to most readers. The universal theme of The Wizard of Oz, "there is no place like home,” is revealed through a character who is far from home and feels vulnerable and alone. The theme supports the idea that readers can relate to feeling isolated and alone in the world. What should be included to make this body paragraph more effective? a thesis statement to explain the author's viewpoint a concluding sentence that persuades readers to read The Wizard of Oz details that explain how the characters support the theme commentary that connects the evidence to the reason
I figured out the answer just did it on Edge 2021!!!
It's D, commentary that connects the evidence to the reason
I attached a picture below but the answer D
Answer:
D. commentary that connects the evidence to the reason.
Explanation:
Option D is the correct answer.
This is because an effective paragraph usually focuses on the main point and usually contain sentences that are are related to the subject matter. But they are given in order to expand.
The commentary that actually connects the evidence with the reason will improve the paragraph's effectiveness and give more explanation on the evidence. At the same time, the paragraph's main idea must not be eliminated in the course of the writing the paragraph.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
Right on edg
Read this sentence from Dante's inferno, Castro I, in which Dante relates the setting of the story. ( I cannot say clearly how I entered there, so drowsy with sleep had I grown at that hour when first I wandered off from the true way) what is the most likely implication of these lines
Answer:
Dante is lost and disorientated and does not know where he is.
Explanation:
Answer:
The events may have occurred in a dream.
Explanation:
I need help on my no red ink section Passive Voice. I am struggling
Answer:
what is the question :) so I can answer it
What is the resolution to the conflict in the short story the lottery
Answer:
The conflict is the lottery.
Explanation:
The resolution is when they start stoning Tessie.
The 4 great Pokemon characters are off on a great adventure. They have embarked on a journey to the legendary Evolution Mountain. Evolution Mountain is also the place that gave Ms. Annetta her special powers…(more on that later) So the 4 Pokemon are off to find the source of many evolutions stones that evolve certain Pokemon, namely, Fire, Water and Thunder Stones. In order for pokemon to complete their journey, they will only be allowed to travel with one jug of their chosen drink. There are 4 pokemon, with 4 jugs, and each jug is of a different size: 25, 30, 35 and 40 litres.
Here are the clues:
CLUES:
1. Charmander’s jug is 5 liters larger than Snorlax’s jug.
2. The Orange Crush jug is 10 liters larger than the Root Beer jug.
3. Of Picachu’s jug and the 25 liter jug, one is the Root Beer jug and the other is the Mountain Dew jug.
4. The 30 liter jug is either Snorlax’s or the Coke jug.
Poem: Arrow and the Song
What do you think the effects of the arrow and the song, as revealed in the final stanza of the poem, are meant to suggest about human actions and their consequences?
Answer:
for people to answer this question we need to see the poem!
Explanation:
What four steps did the
scientists take to grow the
new nose
Who were knights?
A. clergy who ran monasteries
B. lords who ruled manors
C. serfs who defended villages
D. serfs who defended villages
for me it shows that c and d are the same.
I believe the answer is serfs who defended the village though.
A is like B." "We don’t know what "B" is." "OK, A is a little like C." "We don’t know what "C" is either. Explain. ?
Answer:
This is an example of a failure of deductive reasoning.
Explanation:
Deductive reasoning is one that first analyzes two premises to reach a conclusion. If the text shown in the question above were an example of deductive reasoning done correctly, we should read: "we do not know B, nor C and therefore we cannot say that they are equal to A."
However, we see the narrator of the text presenting conclusions without evaluating the premises, presenting a false conclusion. This is an example of inductive reasoning failure.
Please give me a CORRECT answer.
where would the layover from seattle to Hallstatt austria be?
Thankyou!
Answer:
A Hallstatt Tour or A Bavarian Mountain Tour.
What did Charlemagne accomplish?
Answer:
1 Charlemagne united most of Western Europe for the first time since the Roman Empire.
#2 Charlemagne was the first emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.
#3 Charlemagne played a vital role in the spread of Christianity across Europe.
#4 He was the driving force behind the Carolingian Renaissance.
Explanation:
Explanation:
#1 Charlemagne united most of Western Europe for the first time since the Roman Empire.
#2 Charlemagne was the first emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.
#3 Charlemagne played a vital role in the spread of Christianity across Europe.
#4 He was the driving force behind the Carolingian Renaissance.
17.
(09.04 LC)
Read the excerpt from the story Penguin Parade: An Antarctic Adventure:
We boarded a flight from Orlando, Florida to Buenos Aires in Argentina. We would board a ship that would take us from Argentina to the remote Snow Hill Island in the Weddell Sea. Mom slept for the whole plane ride, but I stayed awake and researched penguins that live in Antarctica on my phone. I didn't realize how many penguins didn't live in cold areas like Antarctica. Apparently, I wasn't the only one on the plane interested in reading about animals. The boy sitting across the aisle from me was reading a book about sharks, which was pretty neat.
"Hey," I whispered to the boy so I wouldn't wake up my mom. "Where are you heading?" He said nothing at first and gave me a funny look.
"Argentina, obviously," he said sarcastically as he turned the page in his book. I felt a bit awkward and glanced back at my phone. He didn't seem very friendly. After a while, he closed his book and turned towards me.
"Hey, I'm Steven. What's your name?" he asked. He smiled at me. "Sorry. I can be weird around new people."
"I'm Sally. We're heading to Argentina, too, but only so that we can get on a ship to Antarctica, we are going to see the emperor penguins and their chicks."
What does the reader learn about the trip to Antarctica, since it is told from Sally's point of view? (2 points)
Sally has always wanted to travel to Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Sally and her mom are going to see emperor penguins and their chicks.
Sally and her mom are going to see sharks, which is neat.
Sally and Steven both enjoy reading about animals.
Answer:Answer: its d shes right make her brainliest
Explanation:
Write each fraction or mixed number as a decimal. Use bar notation if the decimal is a repeating decimal. 2 5/8
Answer:
2.625
Explanation:
A mixed number is a combination of a whole number, and a proper fraction.
A proper fraction is a fraction in which numerator is less than denominator.
Given fraction is [tex]2\frac{5}{8}[/tex]
Here, [tex]2\frac{5}{8}[/tex] is a mixed fraction.
It consists of a whole number 2 and a proper fraction [tex]\frac{5}{8}[/tex]
[tex]2\frac{5}{8}=\frac{21}{8}[/tex]
Multiply both numerator and denominator by 125
[tex]\frac{21(125)}{8(125)}=\frac{2625}{1000}=2.625[/tex]
City of Embers
1. What does the role of messenger reveal about the city of Ember?
2. Who might be the "Believers" and what do you think they were doing in Garn Square?
3. How might Mrs. Polster's way of teaching compare to that in your own classes? Do you agree that there is always a clear choice between right and wrong?
Answer:
2
Explanation:
Which situation is an example of an external conflict?
A. A man feels lonely when his company sends him to a new office.
B. A young boy tries to decide if he wants to play football or the
piano.
C. A teenager tries to get her high school to rehire a favorite teacher.
D. A woman struggles to regain her self-confidence after a divorce.
HELP PLEASE!!!!!
Answer:
C.
Explanation:
An external conflict is one by an outside force. The others are all internal conflicts, because they deal with conflicts about feelings. C is about a girl fighting against another character or group, which is an external conflict.
What Constitutional principle was at issue at Cranston West High School?
Answer:
The principle of government neutrality.
Explanation:
The Constitutional principle that was at issue at Cranston West High School was that prayer posters were unconstitutional and violated the government's principles of neutrality in religion.
This was as a result of a lawsuit by a sixteen year old student of the school Jessica Ahlquist who identified as an atheist and won the suit.
Who is Charybdis? Help please!!
Answer:
Charybdis is a sea monster in Greek mythology.
Explanation:
It is based on a whirlpool
Do you need to make a major change in the world to leave a legacy ? 7 sentences pleaseee
Answer:
No, a major change is not the only requirement to leave one's legacy.
Explanation:
Leaving a legacy means leaving some good and important qualities and ways of life to the next generation. In some ways, it also means leaving some inheritance such as money or assets but it implies more to the good qualities that one influences.
Leaving a legacy doesn't necessarily require a person to have a huge impact and change on others. Some will indeed leave a lasting influence and change while most just did what they love and that became influential for others. The most important thing is to do what one loves, sincerely and with love and care. And then, whether that gesture leaves a change on others or not depends on the people's perception and receiving attitude.
So, in my opinion, it is not necessarily required to make a major change to leave a legacy.
Which title is capitalized correctly?
1. Don't Call Me Guilty
2. Seven times a Goose
3. the Little Portrait
4. My Life in the sky
1. Don't Call Me Guilty
Because in title every word is capitalized.
Read John Muir's "Calypso Borealis" and answer the question.
[1] After earning a few dollars working on my brother-in law's farm near Portage [Wisconsin], I set off on the first of my long lonely excursions, botanising in glorious freedom around the Great Lakes and wandering through innumerable tamarac and arbor-vitae swamps, and forests of maple, basswood, ash, elm, balsam, fir, pine, spruce, hemlock, rejoicing in their bound wealth and strength and beauty, climbing the trees, revelling in their flowers and fruit like bees in beds of goldenrods, glorying in the fresh cool beauty and charm of the bog and meadow heathworts, grasses, carices, ferns, mosses, liverworts displayed in boundless profusion.
[2] The rarest and most beautiful of the flowering plants I discovered on this first grand excursion was Calypso borealis (the Hider of the North). I had been fording streams more and more difficult to cross and wading bogs and swamps that seemed more and more extensive and more difficult to force one's way through. Entering one of these great tamarac and arbor-vitae swamps one morning, holding a general though very crooked course by compass, struggling through tangled drooping branches and over and under broad heaps of fallen trees, I began to fear that I would not be able to reach dry ground before dark, and therefore would have to pass the night in the swamp and began, faint and hungry, to plan a nest of branches on one of the largest trees or windfalls like a monkey's nest, or eagle's, or Indian's in the flooded forests of the Orinoco described by Humboldt.
[3] But when the sun was getting low and everything seemed most bewildering and discouraging, I found beautiful Calypso on the mossy bank of a stream, growing not in the ground but on a bed of yellow mosses in which its small white bulb had found a soft nest and from which its one leaf and one flower sprung. The flower was white and made the impression of the utmost simple purity like a snowflower. No other bloom was near it, for the bog a short distance below the surface was still frozen, and the water was ice cold. It seemed the most spiritual of all the flower people I had ever met. I sat down beside it and fairly cried for joy.
[4] It seems wonderful that so frail and lovely a plant has such power over human hearts. This Calypso meeting happened some forty-five years ago, and it was more memorable and impressive than any of my meetings with human beings excepting, perhaps, Emerson and one or two others. When I was leaving the University, Professor J.D. Butler said, "John, I would like to know what becomes of you, and I wish you would write me, say once a year, so I may keep you in sight." I wrote to the Professor, telling him about this meeting with Calypso, and he sent the letter to an Eastern newspaper [The Boston Recorder] with some comments of his own. These, as far as I know, were the first of my words that appeared in print.
[5] How long I sat beside Calypso I don't know. Hunger and weariness vanished, and only after the sun was low in the west I splashed on through the swamp, strong and exhilarated as if never more to feel any mortal care. At length I saw maple woods on a hill and found a log house. I was gladly received. "Where ha ye come fra? The swamp, that awfu' swamp. What were ye doin' there?" etc. "Mony a puir body has been lost in that muckle, cauld, dreary bog and never been found." When I told her I had entered it in search of plants and had been in it all day, she wondered how plants could draw me to these awful places, and said, "It's god's mercy ye ever got out."
[6] Oftentimes I had to sleep without blankets, and sometimes without supper, but usually I had no great difficulty in finding a loaf of bread here and there at the houses of the farmer settlers in the widely scattered clearings. With one of these large backwoods loaves I was able to wander many a long wild fertile mile in the forests and bogs, free as the winds, gathering plants, and glorying in God's abounding inexhaustible spiritual beauty bread. Storms, thunderclouds, winds in the woods—were welcomed as friends.
The words that Muir uses in his essay reveal his view that nature
is filled with countless opportunities to discover rare plants
needs to be conquered and controlled by human exploration
offers many unique challenges for the mind, body, and spirit
presents endless possibilities to experience and appreciate
help ASAP REALLY NEED IT
Answer:
C
Explanation:
Everyone is skeptical to new things
Answer:
C
Explanation:
The scientific community took a skeptical view of the emerging field of Psychology because the field itself was subjective at the time. The researchers didn't have much means to scientifically prove their statements or beliefs.
During what month do people sleep the least?
Answer:
February
Explanation:
February is the shortest month. It either has 28days or 29days, every 4 years because it will be a leap year.
who fed junior his bottles when he was a baby in salvage the bones
Answer:
As the storm calms itself, the family cowers in the torn-open attic of Papa Joseph and Mama Lizbeth’s house. Skeetah is wracked with guilt over losing track of China and promises to look for her once the water level lowers to halfway up the tires on Daddy’s tractor. Esch comforts him by squeezing him as hard as she has embraced the boys she’s had sex with, trying to keep him in one piece. She notices the entire family is bloodied from the broken glass and debris flying about.
Once the water level is low enough, Skeetah jumps in and begins to look for China, convinced she’s waiting for him. Esch watches him until he disappears behind a fallen tree.
Later, the family follows suit and revisits their house, searching for food like they had searched for eggs in the yard days earlier. They find canned peas and packages of ramen. Randall decides the family will stay with Big Henry, and they head towards town.
The houses of Bois Sauvage are in varying states of destruction, and the townspeople gather in the street, each one muttering something about being alive. Big Henry’s house has miraculously been spared, the trees having fallen in a fence around the building. Marquise and Big Henry greet Esch and her family; they were just about to come looking for them. Big Henry plays with a machete they were bringing in case they had to “cut through” to find them (242).
Suddenly, Esch spots Manny, who sits in the bed of a pickup truck with Shaliyah. Randall asks Esch if Manny is the father of her child, and she nods. Randall promises to beat up Manny, but Esch replies that she already did. Randall and Junior, who rides piggyback on Randall, comfort Esch as they take shelter in Big Henry’s house.
Big Henry’s mother, Ms. Bernadine, tends to Daddy’s hand. Marquise takes his dog to look for Skeetah, who refuses to leave the Pit with him. That night, the family—minus Skeetah—sleeps soundly.
In the morning, Esch is eavesdropping on Big Henry’s uncle, Solly, who tells Ms. Bernadine about the terrible damage near the bayou, when Daddy asks Esch if she’s really pregnant. She nods. Daddy apologizes for pushing her and says they’ll have to see a doctor to make sure the baby is healthy. Esch daydreams about the past and the future, envisioning her mother on the couch aside Daddy and picturing Junior feeding the baby. She decides to name the baby after her mother if it is a girl, and after Skeetah if it is a boy.
Big Henry invites the kids to drive with him to St. Catherine to inspect the damage. When they arrive, they can barely comprehend the scene. Hardly any trees or buildings stand; the elementary school where Randall played basketball and Skeetah fought Rico is leveled. People take shelter under makeshift tents and forage for food and supplies in the wreckage. A toothy woman warns them not to drive any further towards the beach, and then she asks them for food. Esch gives her some ramen, and the woman laughs.
The kids pull over, park, and begin walking. Esch sees a man holding his head and perhaps crying. He is sitting on a sofa next to a black casket, which a dog sniffs at and even urinates on. Still walking, the kids find what remains of the liquor store and happen upon some untouched liquor bottles, which they take for Daddy.
Big Henry squats next to Esch and tells her he heard her talking to Daddy about being pregnant. He asks her who the father is, to which she replies, “It don’t have a daddy” (254). He says she’s wrong, because the baby has many fathers, including him. He reassures her that she can rely on him. This touches Esch, who is gathering pieces of glass that will serve as souvenirs when she tells her baby about Hurricane Katrina. She imagines hanging them above her bed and telling the baby a mythologized story about the storm, a mother who slaughtered and destroyed the Gulf.
After bathing with a glass of water each and eating for the first time since the storm, Esch, Randall, Junior, and Big Henry return to the Pit to see Skeetah. He has built a fire that burns tall and is still waiting for China. He refuses to leave in case she returns, despite the others’ protests.
Esch knows that she and her siblings will stay by his side, waiting for China. She knows that China will return, and she pictures Skeetah crying when she comes, melting away to nothing. Esch knows that China will see her and understand that she has fought and protected—that she herself is a mother now.
Explanation:
Based on the selection from Life on the Mississippi, choose the sentence that best expresses Twain’s point of view on life in a small town along the Mississippi River. A. It is interesting in a way that differs from working on a steamboat. B. It is less dangerous and frightening than working on a steamboat. C. It offers opportunities for adventures on land and on the river. D. It is dull and unexciting compared to working on a steamboat.
Answer: . D. It is dull and unexciting compared to working on a steamboat.
Explanation:
Based on the selection from Life on the Mississippi, Twain’s point of view on life in a small town along the Mississippi River was that it is dull and unexciting compared to working on a steamboat.
The steamboat was seen by the boys as a source of fascination as it connected them to the world that was outside of Hannibal.
Add the phrase that completes the thought in the underline sentence.
Answer:
to trying to host the olympics
Explanation:
Answer:
to trying to host the olympics
Explanation:
hope this actually helps
Read Shakespeare sonnet 130. What evidence supports the serious nature of the sonnet? Select two options
Answer: 1 and 3 i think not possotive
Explanation:
Answer:
A and C
Explanation:
Just took the test
Imagine that your family moves into a new neighborhood where you do not feel welcome & your neighbors want you to leave & are very unkind to you & your family. Do you put up with it or move out? Why?
Answer:
I would move out.
Explanation:
I would move out because I'd wanna live somewhere that has positive energy. I don't wanna live somewhere where my neighbors make me feel like I should just leave. If I'm gonna live somewhere, I'm gonna live there for the people and the environment. Moving out is better than living there for years having to put up with rude neighbors.
10 PIONTS FAST ASAP
How does the author of "Salsa Explosion" create suspense?
A. by suggesting that the "explosion" did not actually occur
B. by continuously dropping hints about the coming disaster
C. by explaining the long-term effects of adventurous dining
D. by with-holding details about the story's promised disaster
ASAP
NO FAKE ANSWER OR I WILL REPOERT
Answer:
D. by with-holding details about the story's promised disaster
Explanation:
1. How does the creature cause the death of William and Justine? What does the murder of William tell the creature about himself? According to the creature, what can save him from doing evil? Is this realistic? The answer should be 2 paragraphs of 7-10 sentences each.
Answer:
https://quizlet.com/278235383/frankenstein-questionsanswers-questions-put-in-order-chapters-1-24-flash-cards/
Explanation:
Which sentence from the passage provides evidence that plants in the southwestern states have adapted to the lack of moistur
Answer:
The cacti of the biome have fleshy stems that can store water or waxy coatings that help to prevent water loss .
Explanation:
the problem was about the lack of water for the plant and how it adjusted to these harsh conditions, A explains how the plant stores its water for moisture and how it savages it water for less water loss