Explanation:
invisible because I could go anywhere in the country
This scene from "Doctor Zhivago" (made in 1965) depicts life in Russia during the Bolshevik Revolution. The Bolshevik Revolution was an uprising in Russia against the Tsarist Monarchy system which had instituted unfair practices against peasants. The movie is set in 1918. World War I has ended, but the violent Bolshevik Revolution is underway.
After treating soldiers on the front lines of war, the main character, Dr. Zhivago, returns to his family home in Moscow to find it full of people who he does not know. His home has been confiscated by the new Soviet government and divided into apartments. The 13 families that live there are Revolutionaries, and he is concerned that if he does not say the correct thing to the Revolutionaries, he, his wife, and their son may be killed.
Are there any places in the world today where people have to be careful about what they say? If so, where is this true? How important is freedom of speech to you?
Answer:
the answer is Bolshevik
Explanation:
for you have a good Day!!!
While the students _________ for their quiz, the instructor entered the class. *
prepared
were preparing
was preparing
are preparing
Answer:
it's between prepared and were preparing but i feel like it's more likely that it's prepared
Explanation:
Which sentence includes a dangling modifier? a A. Wondering whether I would ever get a snack, my teacher called on me to answer a question. B. The twins were exhausted this morning, having been up late the night before C. Having been absent from school twice in the last week, Nan needed a doctor's note in order to return. D. After sitting through a three-hour play, I wanted nothing more than to stand up and walk around.
Answer:
C. Having been absent from school twice in the last week, Nan needed a doctor's note in order to return.
How often do you wash your hands? write at least five examples.
Answer:
- After using the bathroom
- Before eating
- After eating
- Before putting contacts in my eyes
- When I get home from somewhere outside my house (school, work, shopping etc)
Answer:
step 1 rub with soap
step 2 wash with water
step 3 have a 20 second
step 4 shake with water
step 5 drying with towel
Anita is writing an argument in favor of allowing students to use smart phones in school. She included the following evidence in her first draft:
Smart phones are essentially mini computers that include educational tools, such as apps, calculators, dictionaries, and Internet access.
Which reason should Anita offer to connect the evidence to her claim?
A.
According to recent surveys, three-fourths of teens have smart phones.
B.
Access to smart phones expands students’ learning opportunities.
C.
Internet access in most schools is too unreliable to support the use of smart phones.
D.
Reports suggest that most students find smart phones a distraction in the classroom.
It's 3 am right now. Should I go biking? What are the chances that I will be attacked?
Answer:
100%
Explanation:
101%............
Help help help help help help help help help
Which asset type would be most useful as part of an income investment strategy?
A. Real estate
B. Certificate of deposit
C. Money market account
D. Savings account
Answer:
A. Real Estate
Explanation:
Making an educated guess here and saying real estate because properties are essentially the most profitable investments
Answer:A
Explanation:just got it right
What does the Fourth of July represent to African American living in the 1850s
Answer:
To some, celebrations of American independence on July 4 are a reminder of the country’s hypocrisy on the matter of freedom, as slavery played a key role in the nation’s history; even today, America’s history of racism is still being written, while other forms of modern-day slavery persist in the U.S. and around the world
Exercise 1 Underline the verbs in the following s 1 She broke the glass. 3 He left for Lagos this morning. 5 We apologised to our teacher. 7 Blessing Okagbare won the race. The striker hit the ball hard. 9
Answer:
1) Verb: Broke
3) Verb: Left
5) Verb: Apologize
7) Verb: Won
9) Verb: Hit
Explanation:
1) What did she do?
3) What did he do?
5) What did we do?
7) What did Blessing Okagbare do?
9) What did the striker do?
please solve it ok very important
Answer:
Sorry im not Hindi so ask someone who can understand Hindi.
How doI rewrite the following sentence in three different ways that are grammatically correct? "It would seem unnecessary for us to go over the old definitions of where and how the short story differs from the novel, but the answer to the question must lie somewhere here."
Answer:
old answer
"It would seem unnecessary for us to go over the old definitions of where and how the short story differs from the novel, but the answer to the question must lie somewhere here."
Explanation: 1- "It would be unnecessary for us to go over older definitions of where and how the stories differ from the novel, but the answer must lie somewhere."
2- "It seems unnecessarry for us to go over definitions of where and how the short story differs from the novel, but the answers here somewhere."
3- " It would seem wrong for us to go through older definitions to how the short story compares to the novel, but the answers here somewhere."
Complete the phone conversation with the future progressive or future perfect form of the words.
Sean: Hi Kathy. Have you started the project about life in 2112? It's really hard. For example_______(the North Pole/melt) by then? Some websites say yes. others say no
Kathy: I'm about to have dinner. Can we talk at seven?
Sean: I________(have) my dinner then. but l______(finish) by 7:45
Kathy: I_______(practice) with the choix at that time.
Sean:_______(you/look) at the project on the weekend?
Kathy: We're going away, but maybe on Sunday afternoon. I think we______(get back) by then.
Sean: But it's for Wednesday! You______(not finish) it on time.
Kathy: I will, but I think I______(work) late on Tuesday to finish it!
What were the bird and the speaker singing about?
Answer:
They were singing about the dew and the wind.
out/week/lot/luis/a/the/doesn t/ go/ during.
Answer:
Oh that's nice nice to meet you here
Answer:
Luis doesn't go a lot during at the week.
Explanation:
This coming Tuesday, Toscanya Cleaning
Services ------- the community for 10 years.
(A) will be serving
(B) had served
(C) has served
(D) will have served
This coming Tuesday, Toscanya Cleaning Services will be serving the community for 10 years. Option (A) is correct.
In a sentence, the present perfect tense is used to describe either an activity that took place recently and is still having an impact today or an action that reflects an unspecified period of time in the past. Let's look at the definitions of the tense in several dictionaries to get a better understanding of it.
The present perfect tense, as defined by the Cambridge Dictionary, is "the form of the verb used for actions or events that have been completed or have happened in a period of time up to now."
Therefore, Option (A) is correct.
Learn more about tense, here;
https://brainly.com/question/11222622
#SPJ4
Read the excerpt from chapter 7 of Obasan by Joy Kogawa.
"The power of print,” Aunt Emily interrupted. "The power of government, Nomi. Power. See how palpable it is? They took away the land, the stores, the businesses, the boats, the houses—everything. Broke up our families, told us who we could see, where we could live, what we could do, what time we could leave our houses, censored our letters, exiled us for no crime. They took our livelihood.”
How does asyndeton impact the meaning in the excerpt?
It persuades the reader to examine their own family history.
It persuades the reader to learn more about this event.
It helps the reader feel Nomi’s confusion toward Aunt Emily.
It helps the reader feel Aunt Emily’s outrage about her past.
Answer:it’s b
Explanation:
It’s b I took the test
Afternoon of the Luddites
"Why don't you send your grandpa a postcard?" Mom suggested. "You know that stack he sent you is already addressed and stamped just waiting for you to write a short note. I'm sure he'd love to hear from you."
Conner stared blankly at the blank TV screen. He was not afraid of technology, but his parents' ridiculous decision to reduce the family's "screen time" was turning him into a reluctant Luddite. He meandered down the hall past his little brother's room. Tater Bug, clad in a knight's helmet and red cape from the treasure chest that held costumes from years of Halloween escapades, wielded a foam sword over his head, yelling "death to tyrants!" as he charged a pile of stuffed animals. Conner sighed and turned down the hall, jealous that his little brother could still play with such imaginative abandon. Tater Bug wasn't even aware of the TV dilemma plaguing the family. Finally, Conner went out the back door and saw Tater Bug's soccer ball on the patio. He nudged it with his foot, and it began a slow roll into the yard. With a couple of quick steps, Conner drew back his foot and gave the ball an angry kick that sent it bouncing off the fence with a loud bang into mom's flowerbed. Conner considered that writing postcards might be safer, but it felt good to attack the ball.
"I want to play!" Tater Bug yelled, running out the back door with his arms outstretched like a champion soaring above tall buildings with the red cape flying behind him. The boy grabbed the ball, spun around, and kicked it back to Conner. Before he knew it, Conner was demonstrating how to bend the ball into the goal to score an unexpected point and win the game in the final quarter.
"Goal!" the brothers yelled when the ball disappeared into the hollyhocks.
Mom and Dad appeared on the patio holding some cold drinks, and Mom swallowed back a warning not to hurt the flowers.
"At least they're doing something," she muttered.
"They can always replant whatever they destroy," Dad laughed.
Select the correct answer.
Which sentence from the passage best describes the resolution?
A. The boy grabbed the ball, spun around, and kicked it back to Conner.
B. Before he knew it, Conner was demonstrating how to bend the ball into the goal to score an unexpected point and win the game in the final quarter.
C. "I want to play!" Tater Bug yelled, running out the back door with his arms outstretched like a champion soaring above tall buildings with the red cape flying behind him.
D. Conner sighed and turned down the hall, jealous that his little brother could still play with such imaginative abandon.
Answer:
Before he knew it, Conner was demonstrating how to bend the ball into the goal to score an unexpected point and win the game in the final quarter.
Explanation:
The resolution of a text refers to how the text is finalized and completed. In the text presented in the question above, we can see that Conner is thoughtful about how his childhood is ending. This can be seen in the way he looks at his younger brother playing and is envious that he can no longer engage in games so intensely. However, after a while, he realizes that involvement in games is not related to childhood, but rather to his willingness to participate in these games. This is the resolution of the text and can be described by the sentence that shows that while playing football with his brother, Conner manages to get involved and see himself scoring an unexpected point at the end of a fictional game.
If a speaker tells a story of his or her childhood to draw attention to the problems kids might face with bullying, what
device is the speaker using?
A. Structure
B. Allusion
C. Tone
D. Anecdote
rich, publish suffix and prefix
Answer: suffix
Explanation: just because i know
ASAP!!!
We will not speak of the innumerable instances in which wasteful and idle men live upon the earnings of industrious wives. Nor shall we speak of situations in which wives leave their husbands, and take with them the children, to perform the double duty of mother and father. And after doing so, they are then followed from place to place, and threatened to be robbed of their children. These wives are accused of depriving the so-called rights of a husband. The husbands, claiming their rights, plant themselves in their poor lodgings, frighten them into paying tribute by taking from them the children, and run these overtasked women into debt. Such instances add up by scores within my own memory. I have seen the husband who had stained himself by a long course of low vice, till his wife was wearied from her heroic forgiveness. His treachery made any effort to forgive him useless. To be able to provide bread for herself and her children, she had to be separate from his ill fame. I have known this kind of man to install himself in the chamber of a woman who loathed him and say she should never take food without his company. I have known these kinds of men to steal their children, whom they knew they had no means to maintain, take them into corrupt company, and to expose them to bodily danger, just to assert their power over their wives. And these women, who alone have borne the pangs of birth, and nourished their infancy, are denied equal rights to parent and protect them. I do believe that this mode of kidnapping—and it is frequent enough in all classes of society—will be by the next age viewed as it is by Heaven now. I believe that the man who avails himself of the shelter of men's laws to steal from a mother her own children, or claim any superior right in them, save that of superior virtue, will bear the stigma he deserves. Just like the man who steals grown men from their motherland, their hopes, and their homes.
What does paragraph 1 suggest about Fuller?
She is scornful of women who repeatedly excuse their husbands’ immoral and criminal behavior.
She feels men abuse their power to control those without rights, such as women and enslaved persons.
Fuller is against the institution of marriage because it does not benefit women.
Fuller demands severe consequences for men who cannot financially support their families.
Answer:
She feels men abuse their power to control those without rights, such as women and enslaved persons.
Explanation:
She mentions men who forces women to only eat when they present, steal children when they cannot feed them, expose them to danger, and assert superiority when they don't have the right. She believes that the women who painfully bore children are denied the rights to be a parent.
It was a great game, and we had fun.
Select one:
a. phrase
b. independent clause
c. subordinate clause
Answer:
B) independent clause
Explanation:
A subordinate clause: is a clause that cannot stand alone as a complete sentence; it merely complements a sentence’s main clause, thereby adding to the whole unit of meaning.
An independent clause: has a subject and a predicate and may stand on its own. A semicolon or a comma followed by a coordinating conjunction may be used to unite independent sentences.
Phrase: a group of two or more words that express a single idea but do not form a complete sentence.
Write a short Thank You note for Friends and Lecturers (about 150 Words)
Answer:
My gratitude to you for all you have done, which I will never forget. I truly appreciate you and your time you spent helping me in many occasions. Thank you very much for the course. I enjoyed every minute of your lecture as well as your marvelous sense of humor.
Explanation:
Please help with the paper thanks
Active readers are involved with what they are reading. They interact with the author and his or her ideas.true or false
functions of nitrogen
No links
English/Choose the CORRECT way to use quotation marks.
A. The physicist Albert Einstein said in his early age, “Subtle is the Lord, but malicious He is not.”
or
B. The physicist Albert Einstein said in his early age, ‘Subtle is the Lord, but malicious He is not.’
A) The physicist Albert Einstein said in his early age, “Subtle is the Lord, but malicious He is not.”
When quoting something we must use the " and not the ' marks.
I hope this helps! :)
Answer:
A. The physicist Albert Einstein said in his early age, “Subtle is the Lord, but malicious He is not.”
Explanation:
For sentences 16-20, choose the correct answer(A, B, C, or D)
16. It is essential that we ... this deadline if we want the project to be successful. A) arrive b) meet c) reach d) win
17 could we ... a time for us to meet early next week? A) do b) fix c) put d) hold
18. Under the new system, junior and senior members of staff will work ... together as a team a)nearly b) tightly c) closely d) firmly
19. If we are not ready to take .... this challenge, we will be in serious trouble next year a) on) down c) off d) out
20. It is very important the we .... up with all the latest technology a) stay b) keep c) hold d)take
Answer:16. C
17.d
18. D
19b
20. B
Sorry If i am wrong
Explanation:
Explanation:
write an essay of about 400 words on? The person who influenced me most
1. Do you have any difficulty in (speak) ____________________ English? .
2. My father (work) ____________________ in the garden when it started to rain.
3. The funny show made the children (laugh) ____________________ a lot.
4. They (already be) ____________________ to Hai Phong many times.
5. My mother (go) ____________________ shopping every Friday.
6. This dress (make) ____________________ by my sister when she was only nine years old.
7. We (be) ____________________ late for school yesterday because of the heavy rain.
8. She said that Tom (drive) _____________________ the car by the time of the accident.
9. Do you know the man who (sit) _____________________ next to me at the party last night?
Answer:
1. speaking
2. was working
3. laughed
4. have already been
5. goes
6. is made
7. were
8. was driving
9. sat
Explanation:
No need for explanations right?
Answer:
speakingworkslaughalready had beenwentmakesweredrovesatReflective essay on stranger in the village
Answer:
"STRANGER IN THE VILLAGE"
by James Baldwin
From all available evidence no black man had ever set foot in this tiny Swiss village before I
came. I was told before arriving that I would probably be a "sight" for the village; I took this to mean that
people of my complexion were rarely seen in Switzerland, and also that city people are always something
of a "sight" outside of the city. It did not occur to me-possibly because I am an American-that there could
be people anywhere who had never seen a Negro.
It is a fact that cannot be explained on the basis of the inaccessibility of the village. The village is
very high, but it is only four hours from Milan and three hours from Lausanne. It is true that it is virtually
unknown. Few people making plans for a holiday would elect to come here. On the other hand, the
villagers are able, presumably, to come and go as they please - which they do: to another town at the foot
of the mountain, with a population of approximately five thousand, the nearest place to see a movie or go
to the bank. In the village there is no movie house, no bank, no library, no theater; very few radios, one
jeep, one station wagon; and at the moment, one typewriter, mine, an invention which the woman next
door to me here had never seen. There are about six hundred people living here, all Catholic- I conclude
this from the fact that the Catholic church is open all year round, whereas the Protestant chapel, set off on
a hill a little removed from the village, is open only in the summertime when the tourists arrive. There are
four or five hotels, all closed now, and four or five bistros, of which, however, only two do any business
during the winter. These two do not do a great deal, for life in the village seems to end around nine or ten
o'clock. There are a few stores, butcher, baker, epicerie, a hardware store, and a money-changer-who
cannot change travelers' checks, but must send them down to the bank, an operation which takes two or
three days. There is something called the Ballet Haus, closed in the winter and used for God knows what,
certainly not ballet, during the summer. There seems to be only one schoolhouse in the village, and this
for the quite young children; I suppose this to mean that their older brothers and sisters at some point
descend from these mountains in order to complete their education-possibly, again, to the town just
below. The landscape is absolutely forbidding, mountains towering on all four sides, ice and snow as far
as the eye can reach. In this white wilderness, men and women and children move all day, carrying
washing, wood, buckets of milk or water, sometimes skiing on Sunday afternoons. All week long boys
and young men are to be seen shoveling snow off the rooftops, or dragging wood down from the forest in
sleds.
The village's only real attraction, which explains the tourist season, is the hot spring water. A
disquietingly high proportion of these tourists are cripples, or semi- cripples, who come year after yearfrom other parts of Switzerland, usually-to take the waters. This lends the village, at the height of the
season, a rather terrifying air of sanctity, as though it were a lesser Lourdes. There is often something
beautiful, there is always something awful, in the spectacle of a person who has lost one of his faculties, a
faculty he never questioned until it was gone, and who struggles to recover it. Yet people remain people,
on crutches or indeed on deathbeds; and wherever I passed, the first summer I was here, among the native
villagers or among the lame, a wind passed with me-of astonishment, curiosity, amusement and outrage.
That first summer I stayed two weeks and never intended to return. But I did return in the winter, to work;
the village offers, obviously, no distractions whatever and has the further advantage of being extremely
cheap. Now it is winter again, a year later, and I am here again. Everyone in the village knows my name,