Okay 1. There once was five perfectly shaped seeds. Their names happened to be Victoria, Chelbj, Tehano, and Tete. They all hated one of the more deformed seeds, his name was Rahnay. Luckily Rahnay had Briana, Joss, and Lauryn as her friends. Since Rahnay had these friends, she put up with the bullying. The five perfect seeds bullied Rahnay because she was the only not normal seed.
One day when Rahnay was walking through the desert, she heard a very loud boom. She was pummeled in the face by a pebble.
"<span>D. The skipper protects his daughter by tying her to the mast" is how this threat is resolved. He gets this ideas from the Greek epic poem The Odyssey, in which the same tactic is used. </span>
Answer:
The statistics show how many people aren't vaccinating their children.
Explanation:
Statistics aren't provided specifically to writers by doctors, they come from whatever reports the writer chooses to use, so that rules out choice 2.
I assume the passage is making a point about how vaccines should be trusted and the anti-vax movement is detrimental, so choice 3 would prove the opposite point.
Statistics are logical, not emotional, so choice 4 is out.
Therefore, choice 1 is the only logical answer.
(I can't be completely sure of this answer without seeing the actual paragraph- I could be wrongly assuming the point that the author is trying to make. If they are trying to prove that vaccines <em>are</em> widely used, then the answer is choice 3. However, that doesn't seem like a very argumentative point to me, so I assumed that they were trying to prove that vaccines need to be used <em>more</em>, making the answer choice 1.)
Answer:
On her way to class, Melinda stopped at her locker to apply lip gloss and check her hair in the small mirror. She closed her locker after she was satisfied with her appearance. Alex, her friend, was running up ahead to meet her. They both walked to class as they avoided the boxes that littered the hallway.
Explanation:
Your welcome :)
Where is the fragment? This makes no sense