Answer:
Pre-tests are a non-graded assessment tool used to determine pre-existing subject knowledge. Typically pre-tests are administered prior to a course to determine knowledge baseline, but here they are used to test students prior to topical material coverage throughout the course.
Answer:
I thinks its to help you better understand the material
Explanation:
Answer:
He takes the blame for everything that happened.
Explanation:
Friar Lorenz is a Franciscan, confidant of Romeo. He is portrayed in the plot as someone sensible who can act in moments of pressure quite rationally when he has time to reflect on something. However, in the last act of Romeo and Juliet, he, acting on impulse and emotion, takes the blame for the tragedy that happened to the young couple and asks to be arrested because his soul has already condemned him.
Which sentence combines the two sentences with an appositive phrase?
Two teams, the Tomcats and the Huskies, battled for the city championship.
Two teams battled for the city championship, and the Tomcats and the Huskies were the teams.
Two teams called the Tomcats and the Huskies battled for the city championship.
The Huskies and the Tomcats were two teams that battled for the city championship.
Two teams, the Tomcats and the Huskies, battled for the city championship.
An appositive phrase renames the noun that comes directly before it. It is also surrounded by commas since the phrase can be removed from the sentence without altering the grammatical structure. In this sentence, the Tomcats and the Huskies rename, or clarify, which two teams are being talked about. Appositive phrases are frequently used to clarify who or what something is. For example, my sister, Sarah, is happy. The appositive "Sarah" clarifies the name of the sister.
B. whether or not a person's voice sounds professional.
C. being diplomatic.
D. the pitch, rate, tone, and volume of a person's voice.
Answer:
d is your answer
Explanation:
To the Green Chapel come, I charge you, to take
Such a dint as you have dealt--you have well deserved. . .
B.) And the loss of my life would be least of any;
That I have you for uncle is my only praise;
My body, but for your blood, is barren of worth;
And for that this folly befits not a king,
And 'tis I that have asked it, it ought to be mine,. . .
C.) By heaven, I would hold me the happiest of men
If by word or by work I once might aspire
To the prize of your praise--'twere a pure joy!'. . .
D.) "Behold , sir," said he, and handles the belt,
"This is the blazon of the blemish that I bear on my neck;
This is the sign of sore loss that I have suffered there;
For the cowardice and coveting that I came to there;
This is the badge of false faith that I was found in there,
Answer:
D.) "Behold , sir," said he, and handles the belt,
"This is the blazon of the blemish that I bear on my neck;
This is the sign of sore loss that I have suffered there;
For the cowardice and coveting that I came to there;
This is the badge of false faith that I was found in there,
Explanation:
The universe of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is represented by well-characterized codes of conduct. The code of chivalry, specifically, shapes the qualities and activities of Sir Gawain and different characters in the poem. The beliefs of chivalry get from the Christian idea of profound quality, and the defenders of gallantry try to advance otherworldly goals in a profoundly fallen world.
The goals of Christian ethical quality and noble valor are united in Gawain's emblematic shield. The pentangle speaks to the five excellencies of knights: friendship, generosity, chastity, courtesy, and piety. Gawain's adherence to these ethics is tried all through the sonnet, however the lyric looks at more than Gawain's own goodness; it asks whether sublime temperance can work in a fallen world. What is truly being tried in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight may be simply the chivalric system, symbolized by Camelot.