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GenaCL600 [577]
3 years ago
14

Everybody respects her change it into passive​

English
1 answer:
Varvara68 [4.7K]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

== == "English grammer active and passive voice change from active to passive .

Explanation:

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Answer:

1. If Hermia does not marry Demetrius, she must be murdered.

2. The argument used for this is that this is the legal destination for girls who disobey their father.

3. he is asking that Hermia be forced to marry.

Explanation:

Although you did not present, we can consider, through the context of the question and the names of the characters, that you are referring to the play "A Midsummer Night's Dream" written by Shakespeare.

In this work, we meet the character Hermia who is in love with Lysander, who also loves her. However, Hermia's father has already arranged her wedding with Demetrius and does not accept that she wishes to marry another. To stop her from marrying Lysander, he goes to Theseus, the ruler of Athens, where the story takes place, so that he can convince Hermia to marry Demetrius. According to Hermia's father, there is a law in Athens that reinforces his right as a father. This law states that if Hermia does not obey her father, she must be murdered. Hermia's father believes that Theseus will convince her to marry, but Theseus gives Hermia the option of going to a convent.

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Guys I have this question is the media bias about Greta Thunberg betraying her mother BC of climate change
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Explanation:

"The haters are as active as ever", the 16-year-old Swedish climate activist posted on social media on Thursday, "going after me, my looks, my clothes, my behaviour and my differences". Anything, she says, rather than talk about the climate crisis.

It hasn't stopped her from campaigning. On Friday, she led another of her climate strikes, heading up a huge demonstration in Montreal, demanding international aviation does more to cut its carbon footprint.

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Of course, the attention isn't surprising. Over the past year, Greta Thunberg has arguably done more to galvanise global action on climate than any other single individual.

And there is no question the unnerving power of her rhetoric comes in part from the fact that she is so young.

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A key reason her "How dare you!" message hit home so hard in the UN this week was because she seemed so jarringly out of place in the air-conditioned formality of the UN's New York HQ.

It is unusual for young people to hold the adult world to account so forcefully and so publicly and some people clearly don't like it.

She certainly did that on Monday when she accused world leaders of "stealing my dreams and my childhood", and warned them that "the eyes of all future generations are upon you. And, if you choose to fail us, I say: 'We will never forgive you'".

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She has the full support of her family. Her father, Svante Thunberg, is travelling in America with her - and shared the privations on her transatlantic voyage. Her mother and younger sister, Beata, stayed in Sweden.

She's no plans to stop campaigning any time soon.

These coming months are crucial, she told me, if the world is going to manage to keep the global temperature increase below 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels. Emissions have to start reducing before the end of next year, she warns, or we are likely to pass tipping points leading to uncontrolled climate change.

Yet, last year global carbon emissions increased by 2.7%, hitting a record high of 37.1bn tonnes.

Thunberg was upset by the response of the world leaders in the UN HQ this week. They politely applauded her speech but had no new initiatives that would significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and most also failed to acknowledge either her message or the fact that millions of people had taken to the streets to demand action just days before.

So, climate action remains very much a work in progress for Thunberg, despite her critics.

"I guess they must feel threatened by us," she wrote this week. "But the world is waking up."

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