Answer and Explanation:
Thorne and Cress first met through a comm. Cress seems to be tongue-tied and self-conscious, anxious about her appearance. Thorne gets surprised when he looked at her hair, quoting; "Aces...is all that hair?" His first line is the same as Flynn Rider's amazement at Rapunzel's hair in the Disney animation, Tangled.
The play moves forward when they have crash-landing Cress's satellite in a desert where Cress and Thorne spend days walking in the desert and they become closer to each other. Thorne helps Cress to survive in the desert. When they are in the desert, he was constantly easing her forward and protecting her when needed.
At one point, Cress, hysterically with fever and fatigue because of the desert, she proclaims her love for Thorne. She moans sadly about how she is going to die without ever being kissed him. And Thorne makes a promise that he won't let her die without being kissed. Then they got rescued from the desert a little while later.
Cress’s action was endorsed by the play because she doesn’t have confidence in her looks. She needs public approval to make her feel good.
Answer:
One of the common myths of becoming a parent that’s not true is your kid will be a mini you, there is absolutely no guarantee your child will share the same interests, hobbies, politics, and religious beliefs as you.
Explanation: I hope u do well on whatever your doing. :D
<span>The correct answer is
(a). Episodes are transitional sections that occur between statements of the
subject in a fugue. It is generally fundamental to the musical experience of
fugue that the subject disappears and later reappears, but that doesn’t mean
that fugues have to have episodes. Some fugues have no episodes, which means
that subject is always present, and some are mostly consisted from episodes.</span>
Answer:
b. I'm pretty sure.............