Answer:
(The recorded is familiar, helping children feel more comfortable playing it.)
Explanation:
This question seems to be incomplete. However, there is enough information to find the right answer.
Answer: B. She simulated labor pains though she is not in labor
Explanation:
In The Handmaid's Tale (1985), by Margaret Atwood, the birth of the babies has a ritualistic custom that goes with the theme of the book, about women giving birth to children that could be taken from them. That´s why the woman who will be taking the baby has her own mimics the birth as if she was the one doing it, despite them not being able to give birth.
So, when Janine, now known as Ofwarren, is about to have her baby, Commander Warren's Wife lies next to her as if she was the one giving birth, while Janine lies in the master bedroom, and the Handmaids gather around the bed to watch.
Answer:
1) Why Did You Start Looking For Another Job?
2) Why Are You Leaving?
3) What Does Your New Position Offer That Influenced Your Decision To Leave?
4) What Could We Have Done Better?
5) Would You Ever Consider Returning To This Company?
6) What Could We Have Done To Keep You Here?
7) Were You Comfortable Talking To Your Manager?
8) Did You Have All The Tools You Needed To Succeed At Your Job?
9) Do You Feel Your Job Description Changed Since You Were Hired? How?
10) What Was The Best Part Of Your Job?
Explanation:
Answer: Their feelings change depending on the way they see the albatross.
Explanation:
<em>''The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”</em> (1798) is a poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It portrays an old sailor and supernatural events that he experiences at sea, upon killing an albatross.
When the crew members perceive albatross as a sign of good fortune, they get angry with the Mariner because he killed it. On the other hand, when they view the bird as the cause of bad weather, they are satisfied because it is dead. Finally, the crew members realize that they are punished for the death of albatross, and are mad at the Mariner.
Even though i walk through the valley of the shadow of death, i will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me
psalm 23:4
exemplify the character of the struggle between the righteous and the rest