Answer:
In paragraph 47, it says “moments like these make a pioneering flight anything but dull” i’d say he’s optimistic and determined? ? and in 48, it describes how i’m assuming people he looks up to walked the same path so maybe he’s honored to be on the journey
Explanation:
hope this is correct
This question has to do with the correct form of present simple tense for each person. Here, you should know that this form for every person looks the same, except for third person (he, she, it) where you have to add -s. Having this in mind, these are the correct answers:
1. Many Canadian citizens who live in Montreal speak French.
2. She speaks highly of the new president of the company.
3. Grace usually sleeps longer than her sister.
4. Newborn babies sleep for 16 to 17 hours a day.
5. Jorge suffers from chronic back pain.6. People with Alzheimer's disease suffer from memory loss.
As word of the group's good deeds spread, AFL-CIO unions, churches, community organizations, businesses and individuals donated $35,000, which Tepeyac quickly dispensed to victims and their families.
She worked as a nanny to a 4-year-old before her employers disappeared on September 11.
Immigrant communities, hard-hit by recession and lacking the cushion of a safety net, are also gripped with fear as the Bush Administration recasts immigration policy within the framework of national security and the war on terrorism.
Now the amnesty debate is on hold in Washington, and community groups are steeling themselves for reversals on hard-fought battles against Border Patrol violence, INS raids and detentions and racial profiling.
Catherine Tactaquin, director of the National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, says, "We're hit with a revival of historic patterns of fear, hatred, of fingering immigrants as threats to national security.
If this helped can you mark me brainliest plz?
Answer:
Ogadi's life always seemed to take a turn for the worse. Born in Umuneke, a remote African village, to a father and forced to live with Onome, a wicked stepmother, Ogadi thought life couldn't be worse. She quickly found out how wrong she was when she was plucked out of Umuneke and thrown into the city. Amidst the painful feelings of bitterness, sorrow, poverty, blackmail and joyful celebration, the mysteries surrounding poor Ogadi's past, present and future is revealed by the author.
Explanation: