Answer:
Principal Nezu because he's just my favorite :))
Answer:
Aizawa hands down. I like how even if he's a bit grumpy sometimes he still makes sures to take care of his problem children lol. He's also a pretty interesting character in terms of his past
Read this excerpt from We've Got a Job: The 1963 Children's March. One child in the neighborhood owned a bicycle. Wash and his sister had a wagon. For Christmas one year, they each received a pair of iron roller skates. When those wore out, Wash said, "we would take an old broom and turn it upside down, and that would be our horse. And we would get a coat hanger and make a cowboy gun." How does this excerpt help readers make a personal connection to the story?
Answer:
c
Explanation:
Answer:
Its C because the passage gives details about the toys that the children in Wash's street had.
Explanation:
Help please this is orchestra help!!!!
Answer:
1: half, quarter, quarter
2: half, half
3: quarter, quarter, quarter, quarter
4: quarter, quarter, half
Explanation:
filled in note = quarter note(1 beat each)
empty note = half note(2 beats each)
I learned in choir class. :)
Which best states how the narrator’s point of view helps the reader understand the excerpt?
1,2,3,4
Answer:
The narrator's point of view allows the reader to develop a better understanding of the author's opinion. The narrator's point of view allows the reader to understand the perspectives of all of the characters.
Answer:
la respuesta es 3
Explanation:
esperó que te sirva
Which of these details supports the central idea?
Central Idea: Even though one of Edison's inventions failed, he never stopped
trying out new ideas.
Edison is known as the "Wizard of Menlo Park."
One little known invention of Edison's was the
"vocal engine."
The phonograph and first motion picture were two
of Edison's famous inventions.
Some of the most famous inventors failed at
some point in their lives.
Answer: One little known invention of Edison's was the"vocal engine."
Explanation:
PLEASE ANSWER ASAP!
The solar system is referred to as a neighborhood containing the sun, planets, moons, asteroids, comets, among other celestial bodies. Describe how the sun, planet Earth, and Earth's moon relate to each other.
Answer:
The Sun warms our planet and creates tides along with the Moon due to gravitational force. The Moon orbits the Earth causing moon phases, while the Earth orbits the Sun, causing seasons.
Explanation:
This is supposed to be in the science section but ok :')
Are there any good spelling websites for 9th grade? I want to expand my horizon of words I know but, I also want to make sure I'm spelling all my words correctly.
Answer:
Try Grammarly
Explanation:
Answer:
Grammarly could possibly help. I don't know how well it will work for you, but it works great for me!
Explanation:
what is the definition are body language used to accent or contradict a speaker's message.
Read this line from Patrick Henry's speech:
Sir, we have done everything that could be done to avert
the storm which is now coming on.
What two rhetorical strategies does he most clearly use here?
A. He uses personification to appeal to ethos.
B. He uses parallelism to appeal to logos.
C. He uses simile to appeal to logos.
D. He uses metaphor to appeal to pathos.
Answer: B. He uses parallelism to appeal to logos.
Explanation:
He is using parallelism which is the usage of similar words in the sentence, in this case ''We have done everything that could be done'' and then he is appealing to logos which is considering the logical reason for what they did everything.
Answer A) is incorrect because there is no personification in this sentence.Answer C) is incorrect because there is no simile in the sentence, there is the only parallelism.Answer D) is incorrect because there are no metaphors or pathos( referring to the emotion) in the sentence.Answer:he uses metaphor to appeal to pathos
Explanation:
Is stumbled the verb in this sentence and is weary climber the subject
Answer:
Yes!
Explanation:
A verb is usually a word to describe an action so stumbled would be considered a verb.
The Weary Climber is the subject, because it is the thing/person that is performing the action.
When Rip awakens from his 20-year nap and is still in the woods, what three things show
us that a significant amount of time has passed?
Answer:
When RIP woke up from his 20 year-sleep, he found a different town.
Explanation:
Change into indirect speech of example The teacher said," May i borrow a pen."
Answer:
My teacher asked if I could borrow a pen.
Explanation:
Identify who said the quote. Paraphrase what it means. Analyze the quote, relate the quote to the big picture, or a deeper issue.
Answer:
Jem from to kill a mocking bird, no clue what it means I've never read the book
PLEASEEE HELP ME FOR A HIGHER GRADE :(
I put two pictures to help you help me . . .
I need the answer! ! thx
Answer:
The answer is B
Explanation:
She was hesitant after she had aged so much after living with the fairies.
Essential Question #3: Do you think a person's time in high school should be the highlight of
their life? Justify your response.
Answer:
Kind of
Explanation:
Everyone is different. We are all unique. Some people may enjoy high school more than others. One person could be having the time of their life. They could be popular and be passing all classes. But someone else might not be doing so well.They could be getting bullied and failing classes. It depends on how your high school experience goes.
Match the excerpts to the literary and poetic devices they use
Q: Match the excerpts to the literary and poetic devices they use
Explanation:
You can take this as u please.
Btw plato_+
Passive voice of He will be making a doll
Answer:
A doll would be made by him.
Explanation:
How does lady Macbeth describe sleep
What are the reasons Hamid gives for watching more television than in the past?
Answer:
By Mohsin Hamid Ask novelists whether they spend more time watching TV or reading fiction and prepare yourself to hear them say the unsayable. Movies have always seemed to me a much tighter form of storytelling than novels, requiring greater compression, and in that sense falling somewhere between the short story and the novel in scale. To watch a feature film is to be immersed in its world for an hour and a half, or maybe two, or exceptionally three. A novel that takes only three hours to read would be a short novel indeed, and novels that last five times as long are commonplace. Television is more capacious. Episode after episode, and season after season, a serial drama can uncoil for dozens of hours before reaching its end. Along the way, its characters and plot have room to develop, to change course, to congeal. In its near limitlessness, TV rivals the novel. What once sheltered the novel were differences in the quality of writing. Films could be well written, but they were smaller than novels. TV was big, but its writing was clunky. The novel had “Pride and Prejudice”; TV had “Dynasty.” But television has made enormous leaps in the last decade or so. The writing has improved remarkably, as have the acting, direction and design. Recently we’ve been treated to many shows that seem better than any that came before: the brilliant ethnography of “The Wire,” the dazzling sci-fi of “Battlestar Galactica,” the gorgeous period re-creation of “Mad Men,” the gripping fantasy of “Game of Thrones,” the lacerating self-exploration of “Girls.” Nor is TV’s rise confined to shows originating in only one country. Pakistani, Indian, British and dubbed Turkish dramas are all being devoured here in Pakistan. Thanks to downloads, even Denmark’s “Borgen” has found its local niche. I now watch a lot of TV. And I’m not alone, even among my colleagues. Ask novelists today whether they spend more time watching TV or reading fiction and prepare yourself, at least occasionally, to hear them say the unsayable. That this represents a crisis for the novel seems to me undeniable. But a crisis can be an opportunity. It incites change. And the novel needs to keep changing if it is to remain novel. It must, pilfering a phrase from TV, boldly go where no one has gone before. In the words of the Canadian writer Sheila Heti: “Now that there are these impeccable serial dramas, writers of fiction should feel let off the hook more — not feel obliged to worry so much about plot or character, since audiences can get their fill of plot and character and story there, so novelists can take off in other directions, like what happened with painting when photography came into being more than a hundred years ago. After that there was an incredible flourishing of the art, in so many fascinating directions. The novel should only do what the serial drama could never do.” Television is not the new novel. Television is the old novel. In the future, novelists need not abandon plot and character, but would do well to bear in mind the novel’s weirdness…. Novels are characterized by their intimacy, which is extreme, by their scale, which is vast, and by their form, which is linguistic and synesthetic…. Television gives us something that looks like a small world, made by a group of people who are themselves a small world. The novel gives us sounds pinned down by hieroglyphs, refracted flickerings inside an individual. Sufis tell of two paths to transcendence: One is to look out at the universe and see yourself, the other is to look within yourself and see the universe. Their destinations may converge, but television and the novel travel in opposite directions.
What advantages does Hamid say contemporary television has over the novel? In what ways does Hamid lend credibility to his argument? In an essay of 300 words or more, and using evidence from the text, analyze this argument about the advantages of television, identifying three persuasive examples Hamid uses to bolster his argument.
Explanation:
Hamid shows that today's televisions work better and have more elaborate and complex plots and this attracts the public's attention more intensely.
Hamid talks about this in the article "Are the New ‘Golden Age’ TV Shows the New Novels?" where he shows that in the past people read more than listen to television, but nowadays these roles have been reversed and television has attracted more and more viewers, while books have lost readers.
Hamid says that this has happened because:
The popularization of television.How easy it is to buy a tv.The quality of today's televisions is better than that of older televisions.Today's television has a greater variety of programs that encompass all audiences.Television shows have better, deeper, and more complex plots than older shows.With this, we can conclude that televisions have attracted a larger audience because they have invested in quality both in their operation and in their productions.
You can find more information about this at the link below:
https://brainly.com/question/20393662?referrer=searchResults
What is conflict?
IN AT LEAST 4-8 SENTENCES PLEASE HURRY!!!!!!!
Answer:
Conflict is the clash or disargument between group of people, institute etc.
Answer:
A conflict is a disagreement or a serious difference in opinion between people. A conflict can also refer to war or fight between countries. Its a dissimilarity in ideas, opinions, or interests. Conflict may also refer to incompatibility or variance and clash of events.
I need help on this question.
4. Which phrase best describes the shift in tone from the beginning to the end of the
excerpt?
Horatio alger
1. if you could travel back in time, what years would you go to? Why?
Answer:
If I could travel back into time, I'd go back to 2019 to fix a huge wrong I have made.
Explanation:
In 2 to 3 sentences explain how the context of quindlen’s piece affects you’re understanding of the central idea use details from the op ED in your response
Answer:
Quindlen wrote from his point of view in response to the attacks of September 11. It makes me understand the tragedy better and it can be used to unites American citizens all over. His personal point of view will persuade readers to rethink the meaning and value of American identity.
Explanation: Just reworded it a bit differently so it's not exactly like the sample response.
In Quindlen's op-ed piece written in response to the September 11 attacks, the context significantly influences the understanding of the central idea.
The tragedy of 9/11 serves as a catalyst for Quindlen's perspective that such events have the power to bring Americans together despite their differences. The heightened sense of unity and solidarity in the aftermath of the attacks prompts readers to reconsider the significance and worth of American identity, highlighting the resilience and strength of the nation in the face of adversity.
The context of the tragic event underscores the importance of recognizing and appreciating the diverse elements that contribute to the fabric of America while also acknowledging the ongoing challenges of intolerance and hatred that persist.
For more details regarding Quindlen's op-ed piece, visit:
https://brainly.com/question/11667675
#SPJ2
Poor Leo the Lion, worried he would never escape the hunter’s net! Then, who did he see scampering through the jungle? The same mouse he had released from his trap just a few days before. When the mouse saw his friend, the lion, he quickly nibbled through the knotted net and set him free. "You rescued me,” the mouse said. "Now it’s my turn to set you free!”
Which theme can be found in this excerpt?
Watch out for hunters’ nets in the jungle.
Little mice have extremely sharp teeth.
When we help others, we help ourselves.
Don’t be afraid, even when you are all alone.
Answer:
The answer is C
Explanation:
"When we help others, we help ourselves."
Please mark brainliest <3 I really need it. I hope this answer helps you.
Answer: The answer is C!
Explanation:
Give other person Brainiest. (I think I spelled it right)
Have a great day! :>
What are the definitions of these words.
Chivalrous
Facile
Repose
Assent
Indomitable
Pungent
Temerity
Virulent
Benefactor
Dearth
This part consider a quotation???????????
Answer:
false
Explanation:
Analyze the sentence to determine whether it contains a dangling construction or is written correctly.
Because he was a foreigner, his ignorance of our customs made him feel self-conscious.
A. correctly written
B.dangling construction
Answer: A. correctly written
Explanation:
people hugged, the less likely they were to get sick, even
among individuals who frequently had tense interactions. In other words, both social support and hugging prevented against illness. The same lead researcher has previously shown that the more diverse types of social ties a person has, such as with friends, family, coworkers, and community, the less susceptible to colds they are.
The phrase "friends, familycoworkers, and community" 53-54) primarily serves to
B. clarity that only some social connections are beneficial to health.
A. Illustrate the kinds of social ties to which the author is referring
C. describe the groups of participants in the researcher's previous study
D. provide examples of people from whom readers might be exposed to Mness .
Read the following sentence.
Noah attempted to perform his first (and what he hoped
would not be his last) magic trick for his little brother.
The answer is the 3rd one.
- Atargatis Jones
Answer:
To set off extra information. For example: (I hope this finds you well!)
Describe your ideal job.