Answer:
Image result for Which population was helped by the invasion of the zebra mussels?
In huge numbers, they out-compete other filter feeders, starving them. They adhere to all hard surfaces, including the shells of native mussels, turtles, and crustaceans. In the Midwest they have destroyed boat engines, fouled beaches, and caused damage to boat ramps and docks.
Explanation:
The main reason for asking yourself what you agree and disagree with in a text is that it helps you prepare to qualify the author's claim (C). In other words, by asking yourself what you believe about a text you read, you start the process of evaluating the text, because you assess the author's opinions comparing and contrasting them to yours.
Answers A and B, are both complementary so you cannot choose just one of them. In order to be correct they have to be combined, because by asking yourself what you agree or disagree with in a text you may choose to defend some of the author's claims while challenging others. Also, answer D is wrong because deciding which of the ideas you agree or disagree with is not related to the strengths of the text. You may disagree with an author's claim but this doesn't mean that it wasn't supported well by him/her. So, this could not be considered a weak point of the text.
Explanation:
Hmm I dnt knw do other know
The central ideas found in Society and Solitude and Chapter I of Nature is, both passages stress the importance of individual contemplation.
Answer: Option A.
Explanation:
‘Society and Solitude’ and “Nature’ are both an essay written by the widely known Ralph Waldo Emerson. The former one talks about the notions of society and solitude, while the latter one talks about the euphony between humans and the natural world. But one idea which links both the passage is the importance of individual contemplation.
In ‘Society and Solitude’, Emerson suggests that self contemplation leads to enlightenment. Similarity in ‘Nature’ also, he stresses that one should get rid of the materialistic things and enjoy a pure relation with one’s own thoughts, with nature, and the universe.
Emerson addresses the individual contemplation in both passages as ‘the sublime’, the state of supreme being.