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natima [27]
2 years ago
5

“You might be surprised to learn that there are some basic laws of physics that determine what will happen when Shaun grabs eith

er his snowboard or his skateboard.”
Based on the passage above, what can you infer the rest of the reading will be about?
a.
Shaun White’s gold medal performance
c.
how to buy a snowboard
b.
Shaun White’s new clothing line
d.
the physics of snowboarding


Please select the best answer from the choices provided

A
B
C
D
English
1 answer:
Trava [24]2 years ago
4 0

Answer:

D. the physics of snowboarding

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Julie of the Wolves (Please give an explanation on why you think your answer is correct!!)
azamat

Answer:

C.

Explanation:

Julie of the Wolves is a novel written by Jean Craighead George. The novel is about Julie/Miyax and about her survival in the Alaskan wilderness.

The novel opens with Miyax being lost in the wilderness on the North Slope of Alaska. She ran away from her home, where her husband assaulted her, with the hope to live with her pen pal named Amy.

At the beginning of the novel, Julie of the Wolves, Miyax is described as a girl who believe in herself. She is determined not to return back to her home, where she is abused. Therefore, the phrase that best describes her is belief in herself. Thus option C is correct.

7 0
3 years ago
Fill in the blanks f
butalik [34]
First one is stared at, the second is could not think of, and the third is was creating
7 0
2 years ago
Which of the following motivates icarus to fly near the sun?
xxTIMURxx [149]

i think it was his self - confidence and jealousy


4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Axolotl , give me three examples foreshadowing the transition in the story .
posledela

Answer:Animal Farm makes heavy use of foreshadowing. Most of the plot’s main events are foreshadowed in the opening chapter. This foreshadowing emphasizes the inevitability of what happens, suggesting that violent revolution is doomed to fail, and that power always corrupts. Animal Farm’s foreshadowing also serves to place particular emphasis on the events Orwell saw as central to the failure of the Russian Revolution, and revolutions generally. The events most heavily foreshadowed are the different stages of the farm’s collapse into violence.

Executions

 

How Fictional Characters Would Break Up With You Over Text | The SparkNotes Blog

Napoleon’s decision to execute other animals is foreshadowed in Chapter 1, when Old Major says: “You young porkers who are sitting in front of me, every one of you will scream your lives out at the block within a year.” This prophecy comes true, but instead of being killed by Mr. Jones on the butcher’s “block,” the porkers are killed on Napoleon’s orders on the executioner’s “block.” By using an example of Mr. Jones’s cruelty to foreshadow Napoleon’s, the novella argues that the two regimes, human and pig, are essentially the same.

Boxer’s Death

Boxer’s death is foreshadowed in Chapter 7, when Napoleon’s dogs “go quite mad” and attack Boxer. Although Boxer is unharmed, this incident foreshadows Napoleon’s decision to have Boxer killed. Boxer’s death is also foreshadowed by the novella’s many references to the pasture that will be set apart for retired animals. As the pigs’ treachery unfolds, it becomes clear to the reader that the retirement pasture will never exist. As a result, every reference to Boxer’s retirement becomes an ironic foreshadowing of his betrayal and death. When Boxer himself looks forward to retiring, he is unwittingly foreshadowing that Napoleon will betray him, which emphasizes the cruelty of Napoleon’s deception.

Napoleon’s Treachery

Animal Farm strongly foreshadows that Napoleon and the other pigs will betray the ideals of the rebellion. From the beginning of the novella, the pigs take control of Old Major’s ideas and twist them into new shapes: first “Animalism,” then the simplistic slogan of the sheep: “Four legs good, two legs bad.” The manipulation of Old Major’s ideas foreshadows the ultimate betrayal of the rebellion’s goals, when the commandments of Animalism are replaced by the slogan: “All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others” (Chapter 10). Napoleon’s treachery begins with small deceptions, like taking all the cows’ milk for the pigs, which foreshadow the bigger deceptions to come, such as the lie that Boxer has been taken to hospital. Napoleon’s dogs are threatening from the moment they appear, which foreshadows their role in the violent oppression that follows.

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4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
At the end of Frost’s poem, it says, “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all
serious [3.7K]
The "road" Frost is referring to is the paths you take in life. Paths like, whether you went to college or went travelling or had a hard childhood. In the second stanza, he says "Though as for that the passing there | Had worn them really about the same." 

In the poem it's implied that the roads have the same ending. He doesn't want to go back down the road to the other one, because it goes to the same place. He thought this road might be better, because it was less traveled by, but by traveling it, he made it look the same as the other. 

At the end, where he says "it makes all the difference," he's being ironic. In my opinion, what he actually means is, it doesn't matter which road you take. People take the more unique life path because they think it's better. People take the less unique because they think it's easier. But in the end, the paths are the same, and none of it matters. Your choices and life events all add up, but at the end of the road, all of us die, and end in the same place.
5 0
3 years ago
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