Answer:
does it have to be in second person
Explanation:
WILL DO LATER REMIND ME PLS
This question seems to be incomplete. However, there is enough information to find the right answer.
Answer: Melinda is suffering from depression
Explanation:
Despite the lack of context, we can infer that the character from a book, named Melinda, sleeps all the time, wears drab clothes and black nail polish. The dark tones in her appearance could be related to a taste for hard rock music. However, that wouldn´t explain the constant sleep. We don´t have information about any past trauma, but even if we did, Melinda´s behavior doesn´t seem that of someone in recovery. Melinda simply being lazy and having a taste for wearing dark clothes is too simplistic. And being lazy is not the same that sleeping all day. In the end, someone who sleeps too much is most likely going through depression. And the dark clothes and nail polish, also point in that direction.
Answer:
A. raise his social status in Estella's eyes.
Explanation:
Charles Dickens' novel "Great Expectations" tells the story of an orphaned boy named Pip, real name Philip who was taken care of by his sister and her husband Mr. Joe Gargery. Though born in poverty, he came upon a beneficiary who raised him to the upper class of the society and made it possible for him to be a part of the high class.
We learn of Joe's incompetency in reading and writing in chapter VII when Pip asked Joe to spell his name or read the alphabets in the newspaper. Joe then tells Pip about his childhood and how he had been difficult for him to get education during his childhood. Pip then suggests that Joe also learn alongside him, though secretly, so as not to seem lowly in the eyes of Miss Havisham or Estella. Then again in Chapter XIX, Pip tells Biddy that Joe is "<em>rather backward in some things. For instance, in his learning and his manners</em>." While his attempt to educate Joe is with a good heart, it is also mostly to impress Estella who he loves.
Answer:
a type of cell division that results in two daughter cells each having the same number and kind of chromosomes as the parent nucleus, typical of ordinary tissue growth.
Explanation:
c.
Explanation:
when tells when the phone rang