This is true. The cursor is indeed the blinking line that indicates where the next letter, number, or character will appear.
I think it is A, A novel can instruct or entertain, if that helps
The words from this paragraph from <em>The Calypso Borealis</em> that best show Muir's naturalist philosophy are the last ones:
<em>"Welcomed as friends"
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In the whole passage, the author shows us how deeply connected the character was with nature. It is very clear when Muir says: <em>"With one of these large backwoods loaves I was able to wander many a long wild fertile mile in the forests and bogs, free as the winds, gathering plants, and glorying in God's abounding inexhaustible spiritual beauty bread."
</em>
Winds, plants, storms the woods, everything was perceived by Muir as loving friends cohabiting the beautiful world.
Answer:
Second response "to entertain"
The excerpt isn't persuading the audience to speak out or tell others about censorship, nor is it informing us about censorship. The excerpt includes a comparison of tortillas and poetry, not motivation to speak against censorship.
Hello, the third option - "the research provided does not address the central claim of the original article" is the correct option. Academic writing means using advanced vocabulary and grammar structures, and this is the best example among these four.