Answer:
Margaret Frink and her husband traveled from their home in Indiana to the goldfields of California.
Explanation:
Margaret Frink and her husband liked nature and were intrigued by the exciting moments they could experience in there. They also set out for Independence, Missouri, stopping to stay in hotels and farmhouses along the way.
She also describes the time when they arrived in Independence, Missouri where they had the company of the son of one of Frink's friends, and where they learned that the grass on the prairie would not be growing until May.
She finally tells a fascinating tale of danger, discomfort, and deprivation when they were in Sacramento and all the businesses they built when they got there.
In the question, it states that Juliet wants to find the favourite type of book of the students at her school. She only surveyed her class and her class doesn't represent the entire school as it's just a small portion. 80% of her classmates might like short stories but the majority of the school population might not like short stories. For example, 56% might like young adult, 37% might like science fiction and 7% might like short stories.
So she can't assume that 80% of the school population likes short story when she only surveyed a small percentage of the population.
Answer:
D)
Explanation: To sum up the definition of voracious: "Wanting or devouring great quantities of food." ( From Google Dictionary)
In this case, voracious means incredibly hungry, and thus, the Minotaur has the only sentence involving appetite and food. (Even if it is a bit gruesome)
So the Answer is D. (Hope this helps)
Thomas Paine gives several examples of when he believes it is good to go to war. He argues that it is important to be brave when a little action by the few could improve things for the whole ("at a time when a little might have saved the whole, and made them happy"). He also says that acting in self-defense is the only case in which a war is legitimate. He asks: "if a thief breaks into my house, burns and destroys my property, and kills or threatens to kill me, or those that are in it, and to "bind me in all cases whatsoever" to his absolute will, am I to suffer it?"
On the other hand, engaging in a war for offense, and not defense, is equivalent to "murder," and is completely wrong according to Paine. The comparison between this type of war and murder is a metaphor that Paine uses to give more emphasis to his opinion. Another example is the use of a thief as a character that is compared with an enemy at war.