A boycott is when you refuse to participate or do something on a large scale so in this question the answer would be "The colonists refuse to buy English products" as they are boycotting English products. In the second question, the Boston Tea Party involved <span>the colonists throwing tea into Boston harbor and marks the beginning of the independence war.</span>
Answer:
In the book Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by JK Rowling Harry is first I,troduced to the magical world when he enters Diagon Ally. This ally is a bright cheerful area full of energy he seas so many new and diffrent things described in great color and hears people talking about strange things. It is a great way to show the reader how this world is so magical and new to Harry.
My pet means the absolute world to me. She is my princess as I am her queen, she pounces on top of the highest object and she looks like the most powerful of all. Her fur is orange and white just like a tiger as she crawls through the tall grass looking for prey. At the end of the day she cuddles next to me and purrs as I stroke her softly until she falls asleep next to me watching television.
Basically it is to organize your thoughts. You would usually make a Topic Web before you do a research paper, or essay.
Hope this is the answer you were looking for and that it helps!! :)
1. There are three ways to pronounce the words ending with -s:
- [s] after a voiceless sound such as k, f, p, t, or θ (voiceless sound produces no vibration of vocal chords): cats, hats, weeks
- [z] after a voiced sound such as ð, b, d, g, j, l, m, n, <span>ŋ, r, v, w </span>(voiced sound produces vibration of vocal chords): dogs, gloves, wolves, lives
- [ɪz] after these sounds: [tʃ], [dʒ], [s], [z] (because it would be impossible to pronounce such plural words without an additional sound [ɪ]: cockroaches, watches, bridges, buses, traces, blazes
2. There are three ways to pronounce the words ending with -d:
- [d] after a voiced sound except for d, such as ð, b, g, j, l, m, n, ŋ, r, v, w (voiced sound produces vibration of vocal chords): stayed, raised, moved, returned
- [t] after a voiceless sound except for t, such as k, f, p, or θ (voiceless sound produces no vibration of vocal chords): stopped, watched, coughed, finished
- [ɪd] after d or t: departed, dated, attended, ended