Answer: It's A. The fire that burned down their house
Explanation:
Today, technology enables forms of communication and collaboration undreamt of in the past. ... The walls of the classrooms are no longer a barrier as technology enables new ways of learning, communicating, and working collaboratively. Technology has also begun to change the roles of teachers and learners.
Answer:
It can affect us for example the online classes. Students use their device instead of their brains to help them on assignment, test etc. And (If we are going back to school lol) when we do we won’t know how to answer the teacher if he or she ask a question.
Explanation:
because...
Answer:
The Whites were concerned that their guest may not come after all because it was raining hard outside and their house so far out to be reached easily.
Explanation:
W. W. Jacobs' short story "The Monkey's Paw" is a horror story about a magical monkey's paw that can grant three wishes to its owner. This magic talisman would turn out to be the source of their utmost horror and grief.
At the beginning of the story, the narrator explains that it was raining hard, "the night was cold and wet" and the Whites were huddled near the fireplace. Mr. White and his son Herbert were playing chess while the lady of the house Mrs. White was knitting. They were waiting for their friend "Sergeant-Major Morris" who had told them about "a monkey’s paw or something". But with the heavy shower, rendering people unable to "walk on the footpath without getting stuck in the mud, and the road’s a river" and the isolated location of their cottage, they didn't think he would come after all.
In the story ''The Monkeys Paw'' by W.W. Jacobs, the Whites were concerned that their guest may not come after all due to their recent actions. This story explores the theme of superstition and the consequences of meddling with fate.
The Whites were concerned that their guest may not come after all because they believed their recent actions may have offended him. The story ''The Monkeys Paw'' by W.W. Jacobs explores the theme of superstition and the consequences of meddling with fate. In the story, the Whites make a wish on the monkey's paw, which supposedly grants three wishes, but their wishes come with tragic consequences.
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