Keela always got whatever she wanted. Her father gave her a new bike, a nicer bike than any of her friends had. One day, Keela went into a store and left the bike out front, and when she came back outside, the bike was gone. She didn't care; she could just get another one!
Keela's father said he would not buy her a new bike, and he said that she would have to do chores to earn enough money to buy another one. So, for the next two months, Keela took out the trash, did the dishes, and scooped the dog's poop. Finally, Keela's father told her that she had earned enough money for a new bike. "I'd better work for a few more days," she told him, "because I need enough money to buy a bike lock, too."
Which of these themes is reflected in this passage?
A. People value things more when they have to work for them.
B. Parents should never give anything to their children for free.
C. It is better to buy used bikes because they won't get stolen.
D. Children should always volunteer to help with the chores.
The theme which is reflected in this passage is:
A. People value things more when they have to work for them.
It is when Keela realized the value of money by working hard for it and in a span of time.
Answer:
The theme which is reflected in this passage is:
A. People value things more when they have to work for them.
It is when Keela realized the value of money by working hard for it and in a span of time.
Explanation:
Answer: D) Choosing a video game is hard there are so many for sale.
Explanation: a fused sentence is a type of sentence in which two independent clauses are run together without an appropriate conjunction or mark of punctuation between them, such as a semicolon or a period. From the given options, the one that is an example of a fused sentence is the corresponding to option D, where we have two independent clauses joined without any punctuation between them: "Choosing a video game is hard" and "there are so many for sale."
look up unfamiliar words
find the incident
examine the list of characters
Answer: When reading a play, first examine the list of characters
Explanation: First you must examine the list of characters, identify each character, understand the relationships between them. It is also important to memorize the title and the author. It is not necessary to stop the reading to resort to the dictionary, if the word appears numerous times throughout the text, it is convenient to look for the meaning, there are some words that for context are deciphered.
Answer:
When reading a play, first picture the setting
Explanation:
Because you need to use imagination to visualize the play.
You need to be a creative reader to understand the situation that is represented in the play, so is a good idea to picture the setting.
The other options are correct for reading a narrative text but not for a play.
Eat up thy charge? Is this thy body's end?
Then soul, live thou upon thy servant's loss
And let that pine to aggravate thy store;
Buy terms divine in selling hours of dross;
Within be fed, without be rich no more.
Sonnet 146 discusses the relationship between souls and bodies. It invites the reader to cultivate the soul as opposed to decorating the body. More importantly, it states that worrying about physical beauty can only be done at the expense of the soul. The figurative language of these lines help develop this theme. The speaker addresses the soul and urges it to neglect the body and instead focus on its own enrichment. In these lines, the speaker invites the soul to reach towards heaven (Buy terms divine in selling hours of dross) and ignore other petty preoccupations.
Answer:
She feels like a turncoat because she is taking Nell to the orphan house.
Explanation:
She feels like a turncoat because she is taking Nell to the orphan house. Mattie is not a traitor because Nell is not her child and is going to end up at the orphan house. It was Madam Smith who advised Mattie to take Nell to the orphan house, at first Mattie did not want to take Nell to the orphan house, she loved her and took good care of her and felt that at the orphan house no one would take good care of her.
Answer:
She is taking Nell to the the orphan house.
I don't think so. She is doing it for the good of Nell who isn't her child.
Explanation:
The lines have been taken from Fever 1793.