Everything is better!
You can:
Smile and shout!
No need to pout!
Cry in shock!
Beat the clock!
Yelp in pain if you get a knock!
You can
Yell out loud - oh glee, oh glory!
Tell a really exciting story!
Congratulate!
Celebrate?
Shout out loud “Stop! Go! Wait!”
When you live life with an ‘Exclamation point’
Everything is better!
<span>B. Pacing</span> would be your answer :)
well the most and biggest improvement the internet has given is communication, you can contact someone to the other side of the world and see them without the need to travel all the way!
The Internet has also changed the way we interact with our family, friends, and life partners. Now everyone is connected to everyone else in a simpler, more accessible, and more immediate way; we can conduct part of our personal relationships using our laptops, smart phones, and tablets.
its also useful our daily routine tasks. For example, it helps us to see our notifications and emails. Apart from this, people can use the internet for money transfers, shopping order online food, etc.
You can also reach everything through the internet, you're hungry? get a pizza online. you want to shop? order good and cheap clothes, etc.
Its also a great help to gain knowledge, in the past people who wished to expand the knowledge had to travel the world and look for books, people, etc to gain knowledge, but now? you can get as much as knowledge you need by reading or ordering a book online or watch a 5 min yt video about a title you wish to know more about!
sorry its kinda long lol
The Taliban dislike Malala because: Pakistanis' have a strong distrust of the West, where she is currently located. Many people believe it has plans on their nation. To be fair, this notion is at least somewhat correct.
As documented in Mark Mazzetti's book "The Way of the Knife", the CIA has played a significant role in Pakistan, perhaps most vividly by hiring a Pakistani doctor, Shakil Afridi, to start a phony vaccination campaign in order to seek down Osama bin Laden.
It's no wonder, however, that many Pakistanis believe the West is using Malala for its own reasons, despite its strong support for her and ostensibly unrestricted access to important venues and top power corridors.
<h3>Who is Malala?</h3>
Malala Yousafzai, often known as Malala, is a Pakistani girl education campaigner and the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize recipient.
She is the world's youngest Nobel Prize recipient, as well as the second Pakistani and the first Pashtun to earn the award.
Learn more about Malala:
brainly.com/question/26574843
#SPJ1
3it is the 3 one….:.&.&.&.