Answer: sand walls may be ugly ,but the protection of people and property Is more important
Read the excerpt from Gilgamesh: A New English Version.
Gilgamesh answered, "Dear friend, dear brother, I cannot kill Humbaba alone. Please stay here with me. Stand at my side. 'Two boats lashed together will never sink. A three-ply rope is not easily broken.' If we help each other and fight side by side, what harm can come to us?"
The author includes this excerpt to establish Gilgamesh as
A.a compelling speaker.
B.a ruthless warrior.
C. devoted servant of Shamash.
D.a long-distance traveler.
The author includes this excerpt to establish Gilgamesh as a compelling speaker.
Answer: Option A
<u>Explanation:</u>
Gilgamesh is a central character and a hero from the epic poem ‘Gilgamesh’, which is all about bravery, courage, overcoming one’s fear, and power.
The excerpt provides a conversation between Enkidu and Gilgamesh, where Gilgamesh mentions that he cannot kill the monster Humbaba alone.
The author here depicts Gilgamesh as a compelling speaker, meaning the one who’s captivating and evokes interest in a powerful way.
When Gilgamesh says, ‘If we help each other and fight side by side, what harm can come to us’ it shows that he is powerful and courageous.
Answer: He knows that life is a cycle of death and rebirth.
Explanation:
The father of the speaker in this poem must believe in the cycle of life, death and rebirth because he compares human lives to that of an orange which gets to live, make orange seeds and then get reborn when those orange seeds grow into orange trees.
In believing that human life is perpetual, he shows his belief that humans live perpetually and in likening it to oranges coming back, the method of the perpetual living is being reborn.
Answer:
Theres a couple but mine is it means to be at high risk
Explanation:
the high risked dangered species were in danger of experience.
GPA can be calculated by adding up your grades as points. For example for my school, an A is 4, B is 3, and so on and so forth. Depending on how many subjects you have as grades, you add all those up, then divide it by how many subjects you have. Say I have all A’s in 7 subjects, I multiply 4 by 7 and get 28. I then divide by 7 because that is how many periods/subjects I have. I get a 4.0 GPA, which is how to calculate it. I don’t know the other question, but I hope this helps.