Answer:
There aren't. You have found all the adverbs in the passage:
1. slowly
2. quietly
3. beautifully
4. loudly
Explanation:
An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective or another adverb. It is common for adverbs to have -ly at their endings, but that will not necessarily be the case with all of them. Some examples of adverbs are: well, quickly, early, sweetly, etc.
Let's focus now on the adverbs found in the passage and the words they are modifying:
1. slowly --> modifies the verb "walked"
2. quietly --> modifies the verb "moved"
3. beautifully --> modifies the verb "playing"
4. loudly --> modifies the verb "playing" in a different sentence
I don't know a lot about papers but for examples, the sentence that says "Then after Lily died, he stepped over James dead body and left her traumatized son in his crib and just clutched Lily’s dead body."
The word JAMES should have an apostrophe.
James's
"Severus Snape is not a good person and Harry really needs to rename his child. "
Instead of saying good try something like "pleasurable" or "delightful"
Explanation:
merchants are those who travel from one place to another and feowned means barking all of this sentence means merchant barks at mothers strange instructions
Answer:
If this is for Percy Jackson and the Lighting Thief chapter 19, "We Find Out the Truth, Sort of," when they are in Hades thrown room then this scene shows that the friends are willing to sacrifice for each other for the happiness and safety of the others. This also shows the trust that the friends have for one another. Percy had been accused of taking the master bolt, and when it was found in his backpack, both Annabeth and Grover knew and trusted Percy enough to know that he had not taken it. Towards the end of the chapter Percy leaves his mom behind in the underworld with Hades. Both Annabeth and Grover try to persuade Percy to let them stay in the underworld so Percy can have his mom, but Percy declines and takes Annabeth and Grover with him back to the surface.
Explanation:
Summary:
The lifestyle radicals of the '60s saw themselves as heirs to this American tradition of self-expression; today, it energizes the Tea Party movement, marching to defend individual liberty from the smothering grasp of European-style collectivism. And when it comes to questions about how much the respondents value the individual against the collective that is, how much they give priority to individual interest over the demand of groups, or personal conscience over the orders of authority Americans consistently answer in a way that favors the group over the individual. In fact, we are more likely to favor the group than Europeans are. Surprising as it may sound, Americans are much more likely than Europeans to say that employees should follow a boss's orders even if the boss is wrong; to say that children "must" love their parents; and to believe that parents have a duty to sacrifice themselves for their children. Though Americans do score high on a couple of aspects of individualism, especially where it concerns government intervening in the market, in general, we are likelier than Europeans to believe that individuals should go along and get along.