First Answer: During my visit to the shelter, I learned that its two paid staff members and 13 volunteers spend time with every animal.
Reason: it is the only statement that shows concern and care for animals.
Second answer: It starts, obviously, with being the best student that you can be.
Third answer: Logical fallacy.
Fourth Answer: Improving opportunities in math for young girls will decrease economic dispairity in US.
Reason: I think it does not make sense for improving something makes it worse.
After a week of walks, dances, and visits to Sir John's estate at Barton Park, Edward ruefully explains that he must leave them. Elinor tries to account for the brevity of<span> his visit by assuring herself that he must have some task to fulfill for his demanding mother. After he leaves, she tries to occupy herself by working diligently at her drawing table, though she still finds herself thinking </span>frequently<span> of Edward. Marianne finds herself unable to eat or sleep following Willoughby's sudden departure, yet to her mother's surprise, she also does not </span>appear to be<span> expecting a letter from him. However, when Mrs. Jennings remarks that they have stopped their communal reading of Hamlet since Willoughby's departure, Marianne assures her that she expects Willoughby back within a few weeks. The entire contrast between the characters of Elinor and Marianne </span>may be<span> summed up by saying that, while Elinor embodies sense, Marianne embodies sensibility. Elinor can exercise restraint upon her feelings; she possesses the strength to command her feelings and emotions; she has the virtue of prudence; and she tends </span>to be<span> stoical in the face of disappointment or failure. Marianne is susceptible to feeling to an excessive degree. She is lacking in self-command, in self-restraint, and in the capacity to keep her emotions under control. Elinor possesses a strength of understanding and a coolness of judgment by virtue of which she, though only nineteen years, is capable of being her mother's counselor. She is able, by means of these qualities, to keep in check her mother's eagerness of mind which would otherwise have led that </span>lady<span> to acts of imprudence. Elinor's disposition is certainly affectionate, and her feelings are certainly strong. But she knows how to govern her affections and her feelings. This capacity to govern the feelings and the emotions is something alien to her mother as well as to her sister Marianne. Marianne's abilities are, in many respects, quite equal to Elinor's. She is sensible and clever, but she is too eager in everything, so that her sorrow and her joys know no moderation. She is everything but prudent, and in this respect she resembles her mother closely.
I hope this helps</span>
Jack and I - we
Books - it
Sister - she
You and Dave - they
Plane - it
Sunshine - it
Cheese - it
Cactus - it
Parents - they
Pamela - she
News - it
Scissors - they
Geese - they
Flowers - they
Piano - it
School - it
Daughter - she
Milk - it
Children - they
Sugar - it
Feet - they
Bicycle - it
Ann and Kate - they
Tennis - it
Son - he
Mice - they
Sky - it
Shop - it
Buses - they
Papers - they
Mr. Green - he
Brother-in-law - he
Picture - it
Friendship - it
Dolphin - it
The Ringgs family - they
Answer:
There is no text/passage for me to go off of.
Explanation:
If I don't have the text, I won't know how to go about answering. :(