Answer:
your,she
Explanation:
After reading this poem we can say that It concerns the relationship between man and nature, man being represented by the jar. It speaks of the dependencies they each have on one another as well as their confusion in understanding, which is greater. And as I think Wallace Stevens reflects the themes of barrenness and emptiness of modern life in these lines from "The Anecdote Jar":
It did not give of bird or bush,
Like nothing else in Tennessee.
A.) Is wrong because middle initial should be capitalized and president should not be capitalized.
B.) Is wrong because president shouldn't be capitalized.
C.) Is wrong because first president shouldn't be capitalized.
The proper way to write this sentence is as follows;
D. Franklin D. Roosevelt was the first president to appear on television, and he did it in 1939.
Hope this helps. :)
Whoa, what? I thought the point was that he actually was a terrible person. He opens the door and discovers his life is messed up because of the bad choices he made.
ANNA:
You got some text to back that up?
JENNIFER:
Good call. Let's look in the book. [opening book] Here's what happens right after he opens the door: "Looking into space is like looking into a void. My world is a void. No peace. No drama. Just a hollow room with no ceiling, no floor, no walls. This was all I had, and I choked back a sob."
A. Asking clarifying questions
B. Outlining the discussion plan
C. Asking rhetorical questions
D. Returning to the text
The correct answer is D.
The conversation given above involves three people. Daniel was making some references to a section of a book and Anna was asking him if he has any evidence to back up what he was saying. Jennifer interfered by suggesting that they open the book and check out the facts. This discussion technique used by Jennifer is called returning to text. It involves checking out facts from a book.
Answer:
D. returning to the text
Explanation:
emotional
illogical
Answer:
Explanation:
As an inhabitant of Lantern Yard, Silas Marner had been basic, trusting, and religious until dishonestly blamed for burglary. He at that point lost his confidence in religion and individuals. Getting some distance from mankind, he coordinates his hindered affections toward his consistently expanding heap of coins. At the point when Eppie enters his life, he recovers his confidence in the principal decency of mankind. In his puzzled style, he acknowledges help from his Raveloe neighbors and chooses to raise the motherless tyke who has caught his heart; under her influence, he never again loses hope as a result of the stolen money.