From the box, the words related to the idea that are related to the main concept, global warming includes:
<h3>What is global warming?</h3>
Global warming can be defined as the sustained increase in the average temperature of the Earth, sufficient enough to cause climate change.
Learn more about global warming:
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A peaceful Utopian world where people due not need to worry about financial troubles or poverty.
"I would like before I die to live in a community where no individual has an income that could not provide his family with the ordinary comforts and pleasures of life, and where no individual has an income so large that he did not have to think about his expenditures, and where the spread between is not so great but that the essentials of life may lie within the possession of all concerned. There could be no give and take in many ways for pleasure, but there need be no acceptance of charity."
- What I Hope to Leave Behind, Lines 8-15.
Hope this helps ^^
The imagery on this line reflects Mike's dislike of the city and all that it represents to him.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- "Friday Night Lights" shows how Mike was sad and dismayed by everything when his father and brother died.
- He was an athlete and knew that his brother and father would want him to play for the team.
- But he doesn't want to stay in the city anymore, because it's melancholy and nothing makes him want to stay there.
In this case, the author uses imagery to point out that pretending that Mike wants to be part of the team was very ugly to him and the land he grew up on and which he no longer wants to be on.
More information:
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Answer:
Explanation:
In Walden, one of the many Transcendental concepts Thoreau expressed is the idea that God does not exist in some far away place, but lives instead all around us. "Heaven," he wrote, "is under our feet as well as over our heads." As a Transcendentalist, Thoreau believed that God manifests Himself in the natural world; therefore, nature lives as the source of spiritual truth for those who will seek it there. The poem's persona is one such person.
After listening to the astronomer analyze and "explain" the universe with his charts, diagrams, and mathematical formulas, the poem's speaker becomes "tired and sick." He leaves the stifling atmosphere of the confining lecture room and goes out into "the mystical moist night air."
The influence of Transcendental philosophy can be seen in the contrast between the attitudes and values of the lecturer and those of the poem's speaker. The astronomer intellectualizes nature, perhaps even brilliantly. He is very intelligent, but he is not wise. He understands facts, but he misses truth. The poem's speaker, however, understands that the truth of the universe, of nature itself, can only be understood spiritually. Rejecting the astronomer's carefully reasoned "proofs," he seeks truth instead by "[looking] up in perfect silence at the stars."
--Enotes