Answer:
A) a map showing the different sizes of the moon's craters
Explanation:
the reason for this is because the student wants to show what the surface of the moon looks like
B- is showing the inside and C and D aren't providing the information student wants to show
hopes this help good luck and have a great day!
Answer:
I put in alarms in my phone i know most teens prob have one get a planner and write down due dates . For home duties just make a chore chart. If you belive in astrgy than check thier hoo
Explanation:
In the first two chapters, you meet Jonas the main character and learn a little more about the background of where he is from. He is forced by the strict rules of his society to follow certain rules of life. Every home meal he must share his feelings and dreams. There is a loudspeaker that makes official announcements and there is a punishment called being "released". You also learn that in December there is a coming of age ceremony, where each age group within the community has a big change. Jonas will be turning twelve, which means that he and all the other elevens will be getting their job in the community that they keep for the rest of their lives. Each person does very specific things in their job and have labels, for instance Jonas's dad is a Nurturer and he takes care of all of the babies. One day he brings home a baby boy named, Gabriel, no one is supposed to no this, who is struggling this and they want to adopt him, but they cannot because each family is only allowed two children one girl and one boy. Jonas also has a younger seven year old sister named Lily who at the end of the second chapter, asks for a 'comfort object' a stuffed elephant. Jonas's was a bear, they are all community issued and they are referred to as imaginary.
Silko goes back to a moment in time before her birth to explain the reader the reason why she and her sisters have nothing in common to other girls in the town, in Laguna Pueblo. They were not white girls.
As an Indian girl, Silko explains how white people arrived to Laguna Pueblo and separated Indians offspring from his parents.
Silko is a character that appears in the story "<em>Yellow Woman and the Beauty of Spirit"</em>, written by Leslie Marmol.