Answer:
he signed the emancipation proclamation
Explanation:
idk how to explain it but
i hope that helped
Answer: A hero can come in all forms, but the one thing she can’t be is passive.
Explanation:
1. Is your hero’s goal clearly stated in the set-up? Is what your hero wants obvious to you and to the audience? If not, or if you don’t know what your hero’s goal is, figure it out. And make sure that the goal is spoken aloud and restated in action and words throughout the story.
2. Do clues of what to do next just come to your hero or does he seek them out? If it all happens too easily for your hero, something is wrong. Your hero cannot be handed his destiny, he must work for it at every step.
3. Is your hero active or passive? If the latter, you have a problem. Everything your hero does has to spring from his burning desire and his deeply held need to achieve his goal.
4.Do other characters tell your hero what to do or does he tell them?Here’s a great rule of thumb: A hero never asks questions! The hero knows and others around him look to him for answers, not the other way around. If you see a lot of question marks in the hero’s dialogue, there’s a problem.
I guess there should be provided some options to choose. Anyway I can answer your question. It sounds like that: <span>b. bob yelled at his kids after his boss blamed him when the company lost its largest sales account, even though bob wasn't responsible for the account.</span>
Answer:
D
Explanation:
A, a letter is more personal. B, you can still lose files. And C it's faster to type on computer, and has more tools.