Answer:
I'm not into competitive sport. I'll never break a world record, and I'm sure I'll never win a prize for sport. In fact, I usually come last in races and if I'm in a team, we always lose the match. I don't understand people who need to come first. I've even seen men cry when the opposing team scores a goal! I like being healthy and keeping fit. But I don't need to beat my opponent - I just need to enjoy the game.
Explanation:
The task here is to put the lines in the correct order. The endings and the beginnings of lines are written in bold red letters. When we connect the ending of one line and the beginning of another, words written in red letters should form a phrase that makes sense, e.g. <em>break + a world record, keeping + fit</em>. This is how you solve these questions.
The narration section 1 of "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" can be best described as detached and impersonal. By means of the directness and coldness of this first paragraph Ambrose Bierce takes us straight into the middle of the action. Bierce simply describes an execution in an unemotional tone by providing just the facts: “A<em> rope closely encircled his neck. It was attached to a stout cross-timber above his head and the slack fell to the level of his knees. Some loose boards laid upon the sleepers supporting the metals of the railway supplied a footing for him and his executioners.” </em>In doing so he automatically grabs the reader´s attention.
Answer:
I think that they make life in the community harder. In real life, it depends. The kind of rules the community has, like limits to how many kids you can have, kids are divided into age groups, can't have your own privacy since you must share your feelings and dreams with your family whether you like it or not, etc. I feel that it limits the freedom of the people in the community. It's a strange world too. There are no colors, only one season exists, no birthdays, and you can get "released" if you do not perform or develop as you should. The rules were made to make the world utopian, but I think that limiting what people can and what people can't do in order to make a utopian society is unnecessary.