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Nastasia [14]
3 years ago
8

What kind of person is levi’s grandmother in the story?

English
2 answers:
abruzzese [7]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

Can you add more information?

Explanation:

Rzqust [24]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

where's the picture?

Explanation:

I don't understand

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The beautiful ______ spring weather inspired the crowd to wear shorts.
Nitella [24]

Answer:

c ok

Explanation:

okv thanjksd

4 0
3 years ago
Identify the error in the following sentence and the best way to fix it. Flew through the meadow. A. It is a fragment and needs
zavuch27 [327]

Answer:

D. It is a fragment and needs a subject.

Explanation:

"Flew through the meadow" describes something that an object does. It doesn't specify a subject and it doesn't make much sense without one. A good example of a subject for this sentence fragment would be "The bird" or "The butterfly", which would make the sentence "The bird/butterfly flew through the meadow." That would be a complete, logical sentence, since an object to perform the given action is present.

8 0
2 years ago
How does the satire in the passage influence the readers interpretation of Mr. Collins? In pride and prejudice
levacccp [35]

Answer:c

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
How does this excerpt help readers make a personal connection to the story? by describing the appearance of Wash's neighborhood
nadezda [96]

Answer:

by offering information about Wash’s hopes for the future

Explanation:

Wash, as he sometimes gets to ride in other peoples' cars, sees that there are towns that are better and fancier than the one that he lives in. He hopes that in the future he will  be able to live in one of these towns or the houses in them that are better than his own, and this gives us a personal connection to what he's feeling. 

4 0
3 years ago
Adapted from Autumntime
Ilya [14]

Answer:

i do not know

Explanation:

I saw my first tree today. Oh, I've seen the plastic trees; practically every street has a few of them.

The O'Brien home was one of the few examples of old-style wooden structures that hadn't been demolished in Boston's urban-renewal campaign at the turn of the century.

The home itself was unimpressive. It had none of the marble gloss or steely sheen of modern buildings but was rather a dull white color, with the paint peeling in places.

My mind was on the tree, and I thought the inside tour would never end, but soon we were walking through a doorway hidden in one of the bookshelves and into the back yard. The yard was big — at least 10 by 20 feet — and I was surprised to find real grass growing on the sides of the concrete walkway built for tourists. The grass didn't distract me for long, however, because I just couldn't help noticing the tree!

It was located at one end of the yard, and there was a mesh fence around it for protection. It was similar in form to the plastic trees I'd seen, but there was much more to it than that. You could see details more intricate than in any artificial plant. And it was alive. But best of all was the smell. It was a fresh, living odor, alien to the antiseptic1 world outside with all its metal, plastic, and glass. I wanted to touch the bark, but the fence prevented me from doing so. The three of us stood there for a moment, and then the tour guide told us to make room for the next group. I didn't want to go — in fact, I felt almost like crying.

On the way back home, Mom and Dad were silent, and I read through one of the brochures the guide had passed out. When I came to the part that said the O'Brien home would be open only for the rest of this year, I was sad. They intend to tear down the place to make room for some kind of insurance building, and the tree will have to go, too.

For the rest of the trip, I just sat still, fingering the object in my pocket which I had picked off the grass in the O'Brien's back yard. I think it's called an acorn.

1. very clean, especially as to be bland

Which of the following contributes to the theme?

A. The narrator collects and pockets an acorn from the grass by the tree before he leaves.

B. The inside tour of the O'Brien home is not as impressive as the narrator had hoped.

C. Old structures and trees were destroyed during the Boston urban-renewal campaign.

D. The real tree is more detailed and smells fresher than the plastic trees that line the streets.

5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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