Answer:
Dear friend
How are you? I am well. In your last letter you wanted to know my school. The name of my school is (name) It is in (city, location). There are one thousand students and twenty teachers. There are 30 rooms in the school. seventeen rooms are for classes, one room is for the teachers and the other is for the Head Teacher. The results of the school are very good. All the teachers of our school are very friendly and helpful. They are high qualified teachers. They teach us with pleasure. They love us like their own children. There is a big play ground in front of the school. I love my school very much.
No more today. Take care of yourself. With the best regard to your parents.
Your loving friend
Name
<em>Hope </em><em>this </em><em>will </em><em>help </em><em>you </em><em>if </em><em>not </em><em>then </em><em>a</em><em>d</em><em>vance </em><em>sorry </em><em>!</em><em> </em>
Answer:
Clint is very tall and likes to play the ukulele.
Explanation:
"Clint is tall and very likes" wouldn't work.
"Clint is tall very and" wouldn't work.
"Clint very is tall" wouldn't work.
<u>"Clint is very tall and likes to play the ukulele"</u> would work.
Answer:
Explanation:
King begins his “I Have a Dream” speech by declaring that this occasion will be remembered as the “greatest demonstration for freedom” in United States history. He then evokes Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address and references the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, a document that gave hope of a better future to many African Americans. Despite the abolition of slavery and the time that has since passed, Black people in America are still not free; the aftershocks of slavery are still felt through segregation and discrimination in the United States.
King refers next to the signing of the Declaration of Independence, describing the document as a “promissory note” whose promise has not been fulfilled for African Americans. Therefore, King says he has come to Washington to chide the United States for “defaulting” on this promise in regard to Black Americans who have not been granted life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. The bank of justice, King says, surely still has money in it, and there is a debt to be paid to Black Americans.
King goes on to declare that the time has come to “make justice a reality” for all in the United States. He describes the situation as “urgent,” stating that the growing discontent among Black Americans will not dissipate until equality is won. There will not be peace in America until African Americans are granted their rights as American citizens. Though the situation is urgent, King stresses that his fellow African American protesters should neither resort to violence nor blame all White people, for there are White civil rights protesters among them in the audience, fighting alongside them. The struggle for equality must continue until police brutality is no longer a concern for African Americans, hotels no longer turn them away, ghettos are not their only option, and voting rights are universal—until justice is served.
King acknowledges that protesting has been difficult for many. Some of those present have recently been in prison or have suffered other persecutions. He promises that their struggle will be rewarded and encourages his listeners to return to their home states filled with new hope. King famously declares, “I have a dream,” and describes his hope for a future America where Blacks and Whites will sit and eat together. It is a world in which children will no longer be judged by their skin color and where Black and White alike will join hands. King calls upon his listeners to look to this vision of America to give them hope to keep fighting and asserts that when freedom is allowed to “ring” from every part of the nation, the United States will be what it should have always been, and justice will be achieved.
Answer:
Every four years the American people choose a new president, and 1988 is one of those years.
Explanation:
A fact is quite simply something that has been proven to be true.
The line from President Reagan's address at Moscow State University that is a fact is <u>Every four years the American people choose a new president, and 1988 is one of those years.</u>
Truly, every four years, the Americans cast their votes to choose a new president because they function as a democratic system of government where the citizens have the power to select their leaders.
Answer:
a) Blank verse.
Explanation:
Blank verse is a form of poetry writing that has no specific rhyming sequence. It may be written in iambic pentameter, meaning ten syllables in a line but at times not all lines. The unstressed syllables are followed by the stressed syllables but they do not have any rhyming sequence.
In the lines from the poem given in the question, the lines do use iambic pentameter like-
<u>Wo</u>men <u>of</u> A<u>da</u>mant, <u>fair</u> neo<u>phy</u>tes—
<u>Who</u> thirst <u>for</u> such <u>in</u>struc<u>tion </u>as<u> we</u> give,
where the underlined words are the unstressed syllables while the ones in bold are the stressed syllables.
This un-rhyming verse form is also sometimes known as the heroic verse.