<u>Answer:</u>
The inference about Dr. Jekyll is best supported by evidence from the passage which is that he has lost confidence in his own judgement because of his involvement with Mr. Hyde. So, the right answer to this question is <u>Option A.
</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
This is in reference to a research named “What makes good people do bad things?” by Melissa Dittmann. This matter talks about how even good people in certain social situations can do what a bad person would do. So the article starts with Dr. Jekyll using a chemical to transform his evil and egoistic Dr. Hyde.
There is no actual chemical but what is meant by chemical is here is that a considerable amount of social pressure that can force a good person to become evil where there is loss of confidence in one’s own judgement and thought.
The three phases of the policy debate in order are constructive, cross-examination, and rebuttal.
Explanation:
Constructive: each side performs their opinion for or against the resolution. The first constructive are normally prewritten.
Cross-examination: supporting each effective speech is a short question-and-answer session. The debater asking questions is generally given control over the cross-x.
Rebuttal: each side counters to the evidence of the defense and crystallizes their own cases. Normally uniquely new proof/arguments are not deducted in these speeches.
I'm going to go with A.
Choice B makes it sounds like Josephine is reading to an actual whale about children.
Choice C just sounds wayyy too cluttered when read aloud.
And choice D, it's not written correctly.
Answer:
Forget About it is the answer
Explanation:
I took the test and that answer is correct.
Answer: Celeb felt calm because he knows the solution to his problem .
Explanation: This sentence should be written in either of these two ways: "Celeb felt calm because he knew the solution to his problem", or "Celeb feels calm because he knows the solution to his problem."
- This is because "felt" is past tense, and "knows" is present tense. Both of these words need to be either present or past tense for a grammatically correct sentence.