I can't give you an answer for most of these since they are personal questions, instead I will guide you through them.
1. <em>How are you affected by nature?</em> This one is simple. Just write about your thoughts on nature. <em>Do you find comfort in it?</em> This one is asking if nature is calming for you. <em>Do you reflect the mood of nature?</em> This one might be a little harder to understand, but all it's asking is if nature is if the calming or irritating (whatever mood you see in nature) is incorporated in your life.
2. <em>What is the role of nature in your life?</em> This one is similar to the first question, but it's asking how you interact with nature instead of your thoughts of it.
3. <em>What is meant by an individual's spiritual side? </em>Define what a "spiritual side" is using a textbook definition. <em>How do you define it?</em> Define what a "spiritual side" is using your own words.
4. <em>Is there a connection between the individual's spirit and nature?</em> Does one's spirit (not necessarily your spirit) and nature connect? <em>If so, what is that connection?</em> How do they connect?
5. <em>What does it mean to know something intuitively?</em> Define intuitively<em> For example, has a parent or a sibling ever known something was wrong with you without having talked with or seen you? </em>Have they? If so, you could probably use that in your writing as an example.<em> What do we mean when we say "I just know it"?</em> "Just knowing it" is the same thing as knowing something intuitively, but probably talk about how one would "just know it."
6. <em>How do you demonstrate that you are an individual?</em> You should give examples here on how you are an individual. Maybe you like to do things by yourself or you aren't heavily influenced by others thoughts and beliefs?<em> Do you think independently of others or do you follow the crowd? </em>Simply state if you fall into peer pressure in any way.
I hope you do well on your essay or whatever this is for :D
A. "When she ... lived there."
This line only defines a specific detail about how the special agent survived through a fake name as a spy. No central theme is described through this sentence.
B. "Baissac’s goal ... resistance groups."
This statement provides the agent’s motive and the way she enacted the task provided. However, that does not completely cover everything in the passage.
C. "Baissac did ... her tasks."
Significant work is not specific, and Normandy and traveling by a bicycle are smaller and irrelevant details, not the big picture that should be concluded from this passage.
D. "As a ... German troops."
This is the statement that definitely defines the central idea of the excerpt. When we break this line into sections, we can see that it illustrates that she performed multiple essential tasks when appointed in Normandy. The phrase “sometimes dangerous tasks” describes the critical nature of the job she handled in there. And, also the opposition (German troops) is clearly mentioned in this sentence which helps to convey the idea very clearly.
Answer:
eaten
Explanation:
She has just eaten breakfast.