Answer:
sup
Explanation:
well i walk home
its a nice alone time
when its sunny when its raining i always like the walk home
its quiet
and i can just plug my headphones in and listen to music for that 20min walk
when i listen to my music everythign around me just dissolves away
its just me and my music and my surroundings
i dont rly have too many friends so no i dont go over to anyone's house after school
walking back from my school i have two difrerent routes
one is walking through town whcih is crowded noisy and a shorter route
and the other is taking the nice side paths and just having a quiet place to just be with myself for once
and yeah i typically take the side paths but occassionally ya girl needs coffee so we gotta go through town ahahah
but yeah my walk home from school is very calming and its good exercise too
also i can walk at my own pace cuz everyone says i walk too slow for them but i can just be myself
its pretty awesome
Prince Escalus appears in Acts 1 and 3 to end the duels between the families and to hand out appropriate punishments to the people who have been fighting. He is also a mechanism for the audience to know or learn specific details of the brawls that may have been missed. In both Act 1 and 3, Benvolio recounts the fights to the Prince.
Escalus gives punishments that will significantly change the fate of the characters, and, if those punishments had not been given, would significantly change the direction of the play. His ruling that anyone caught fighting again in Act 1 would be killed, makes Romeo's banishment in Act 3 necessary, thus forcing his and Juliet's actions in Acts 4 and 5.
Answer:
The pattern of notice writing
is down
the pattern of letter ( informal )is also
down
Explanation:
Brainliest PLZ
The First Amendment says: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press; or the right of the people to peaceably assemble and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
Phillis Wheatley’s poem “To His Excellency General Washington” is as unique as the poet herself. The poem was sent to George Washington, the newly appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Armies of North America, in October of 1775, well before American Independence was declared in 1776.