No, I would not take it because if you lived for the rest of the world then it would get boring and would seem like the same day over and over again. I would also not be able to see my family members that I grew up with and spent my life knowing and loving. Another reason why I wouldn't consider immportality for a choice to me is because maybe in the future things get worse and worse to live and because after all there is a lot of polution in the earth, who knows how much there will be in 100 years? I could not handle the anoyyance of just living for so many years wondering what will happen next. Or if things will change, because the same thing over and pver again is boring and not worth the power of imortality.
The answer is:
There was no long run-up to the jump.
The jumper carried special weights.
The jumper made more than one jump.
In the excerpt from "The Ancient City," the author Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges makes reference to the long jump exhibited in ancient Greek athletics, which was quite different from modern long jump. For example, there is indication that the athletes did not run before performing the jump, so they probably executed numerous jumps. He also mentions that athletes moved forward special weights, called halteres, which provided impulse to the jump.
A. It shows that Cassius thinks that Brutus is too optimistic.
What Cassius is basically asking Brutus is whether he is willing to be humiliated and be marched through the streets tied up as trophy because this is what usually happened to the defeated. What Cassius is trying to communicate to Brutus is the notion that he should consider the consequences of what were to happen should he happen to fail.
Answer:
Ain't isn't a word and no it shouldn't be used as proper English because no one was ever taught to say the ain't when they were learning English.
Explanation: