La respuesta correcta a esta pregunta abierta es la siguiente.
A pesar de que no hay opciones o incisos para responder, podemos decir lo siguiente.
Costumbre o ceremonia que ejemplifica la permanencia en la historia debe que ser de 4 letras y la 2da letra es i.
La respuesta correcta es "rito." Ahí están las cuatri letras, y la segunda es "i."
Un rito es precisamente una costumbre, una forma de hacer las cosas de manera constante o periódica, que bien pudiera ser consierado una ceremonia. Son prácticas que son parte de un acto o protocolo previamente establecido
Como son prácticas frecuentes que identifican a un pueblo, una raza, o un grupo específico esos ritos son parte importante de la cultura y la historia de las personas.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
You forgot to include the video, the link to the video, or the name of the video to look for it. This information is necessary to know what you are talking about.
However, doing some research, we can comment on the following.
The colonists addressing this song towards English King George III. What the colonists are doing is expressing the series of complaints stated in the Declaration of Independence drafted by Thomas Jefferson and other four prominent founding fathers, as was the case of Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, John Adams, and Robert Livingstone.
The Second Continental Congress held in the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in July 1776, asked Jefferson to draft the Declaration, citing all the grievances committed by the English crown. The Declaration was finally adopted on the fourth of July of that year.
The Spanish settled most of what is now Mexico, The southwest United States, and Florida. It’s TRUE
It depends on what penalties, and the severity of the student cheating.
So, the student is cheating on something minor, something unimportant, then I don't think they need to be kicked out of class just for that, but maybe get a 0 on that whole thing and that will teach them a lesson.
If the student is cheating on something important (excluding big tests), then the school should probably: A, give them a 0 on it or B, move them down to a lower level so the student feels like they don't have to cheat.
The worst thing they could do is cheat on a really big test like an exam, then they will probably end up with a big fat 0 on it all and flunk that class, or get kicked out of class.
Lots of people (adults and kids) think that penalties should be easier on the kids, but I don't agree with that. If the kid has done something wrong, then the kid needs to pay for their actions and deal with the consequences.