droughts
blizzards
earthquakes
Answer:
The Pacific Ring of Fire is an area prone to earthquakes.
Explanation:
The Ring of Fire is the arc region around the basin of the Pacific Ocean which is known for the volcanic eruptions and earthquakes that are prevalent in the region. It is a long horse-shoe shaped with a seismic active belt for earthquakes, volcanoes and tectonic plate boundaries that borders the pacific Basin. It is also referred to as the Circum-Pacific Belt, with most of the active volcanoes and earthquakes occurring in this region.
ROMEO: This gentleman, the prince's near ally,
My very friend, hath got his mortal hurt
In my behalf; my reputation stain'd
With Tybalt's slander,—Tybalt, that an hour
Hath been my kinsman! O sweet Juliet,
Thy beauty hath made me effeminate
And in my temper soften'd valour's steel!
What is the central idea of the excerpt?
need asap please!
People in the community fear becoming similarly shamed
Answer and Explanation:
The interaction between Wes and his mother makes it difficult to say who was right. Although, I do not believe that using violence as punishment and imposing wills on children is the right way to be a mother, I cannot help denying that Wes's mother did him a good by sending him to military school, as he spared Wes the inhospitable environment where he lived and allowed the military school to change his personality for the better, but I think that her position in imposing this change of school should have been better explored. I believe she should have talked to Wes and exposed her opinion about him going to military school and listening to what he has to say about it and the behavior he is assuming.
The student's question references a scene from 'The Other Wes Moore', but the given context derives from 'Educated' by Tara Westover and Frederick Douglass's nineteenth-century slave narrative. As such, an accurate summary and opinion regarding the situation in 'The Other Wes Moore' cannot be provided.
The question references the book 'The Other Wes Moore' by Wes Moore but provides reference context from Tara Westover's memoir, 'Educated,' and Frederick Douglass's slave narrative. Based on your query, it seems you're asking for a summary of the interaction between Wes and his mother on pages 87-89. However, the data given does not include the book 'The Other Wes Moore', rather it's from Tara Westover's memoir and Frederick Douglass's slave narrative. Therefore, the answer cannot be accurately provided based on the text provided. If you provide the correct context from Wes Moore's book, we could review and form an opinion about the mother's reaction.
#SPJ11