Answer:
1. the down town area is so crowded that it is difficult to get a taxi
2.my sister is so young that she can't go to the zoo alone
3.the road is so narrow that it is difficult for two cars to pass by each other
4.the tv program was so interesting that the children didn't want to go to bed early
5.the streets are so crowded that traffic jams usually happen
<h2>Question:</h2>
Why does Captain Jaggery order Mr. Hollybrass to whip Zachariah?
<h2>Answer:</h2>
<u>To</u><u> </u><u>punish</u><u> </u><u>Charlotte</u><u> </u>
<h2>
<u>#CARRYONLEARNING</u><u> </u></h2><h2>
<u>#STUDYWELL</u><u> </u></h2>
Answer:
Black and White world is much easier to control
Explanation:
As the Giver tells Jonas, in order to gain control of certain things such as the weather, for example—the community had to let go of others. And one of the things it got rid of was color
Answer:
She thinks it's demeaning and discriminatory.
Explanation:
The Help is a debut novel of Kathryn Stockett that narrates the story of Miss Eugenia also known as Skeeter Phelan. She is a white young woman of 22-years old. The book narrates the story of the black maid's lives in Jackson Mississippi. Skeeter aspires to be a writer but gets employed in Jackson Journal where she was required to write about housekeeping. Skeeter rarely knows about housekeeping so she takes help from her friend's maid, Aibileen.
The Home Help Sanitation Initiative was a bill that was passed as a disease-preventive bill. According to this bill, African American maids were required to use separate bathrooms so that they may not spread their diseases to the whites. When Skeeter cam to know about this she thought this initiative to be demeaning and discriminatory.
Answer:
Ebbs and flows in this context mean that human misery comes and goes.
Explanation:
The poem, Dover Beach, written by Matthew Arnold, uses the term 'ebbs and flows' to describe how human misery comes and goes. Ebbs and flows, in the context of sea movement, refers to the coming (flows) and going (ebbs) of the sea tides.
We can say that though hardships and miseries are experienced by all humans, eventually, it would all go away, drifting into the sea as we continue to live on and experience more happiness and betterment flowing in.
The stanza referred is this excerpt:
Sophocles long ago
Heard it on the Ægean, and it brought
Into his mind the turbid ebb and flow
Of human misery; we
Find also in the sound a thought,
Hearing it by this distant northern sea.