Answer:
D.
Explanation: it is the only one with proper capitalization and punctuation as well as the quotation marks being placed properly
Answer:
The last one
Explanation:
It makes the most sense
She thinks that they are treating him well with his health and stuff but she still thinks he is lonely on the inside and that is mental
Answer: Long but worth it -.-
“Self-Reliance” is central to understanding Emerson’s thought, but it can be difficult to teach because of its vocabulary and sentence structure. This lesson offers a thorough exploration of the essay. The text analysis focuses on Emerson’s definition of individualism, his analysis of society, and the way he believes his version of individualism can transform — indeed, save — American society.
The first interactive exercise, well-suited for individual or small group work, presents some of Emerson’s more famous aphorisms as tweets from Dr. Ralph, a nineteenth-century self-help guru, and asks students to interpret and paraphrase them. The second invites students to consider whether they would embrace Dr. Ralph’s vision of life. It explores paragraph 7, the most well-developed in the essay and the only one that shows Emerson interacting with other people to any substantial degree. The exercise is designed to raise questions about the implications of Emersonian self-reliance for one’s relations with others, including family, friends, and the broader society. The excerpt illustrates critic’s Louis Menand’s contention, cited in the background note, that Emerson’s essays, although generally taken as affirmations, are “deeply unconsoling.”
ʜᴏᴘᴇ ɪᴛ ʜᴇʟᴘs
❤ʙᴇ ʙʀᴀɪɴʟʏ❤
Answer:
formal language:
I am afraid of that place.
Don't worry, child.
He is a strange sort of a person.
informal language:
That place gives me the heeble-jeebles.
That guy is a weirdo.
Take a chill pill, kiddo.