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Tema [17]
3 years ago
11

2

English
1 answer:
Keith_Richards [23]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

Absolutely so !!  In fact, ALWAYS so. There are no exceptions.

Explanation:

When I graduate from college. I am getting married.

After the soccer game, we will go to your house.

etc...

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KATRIN_1 [288]
It Should Be C.) Letters

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3 years ago
Frank wants to buy an entertainment system that costs $500, including taxes. To pay for the entertainment system, he will use a
sergejj [24]
The answer is $66.

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4 years ago
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Write a 7-10 sentence paragraph about Ponyboy Curtis' character from The Outsiders.
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Ponyboy is a down-town hood who many know as a "greaser." Ponyboy has two older brothers; Sodapop and Darry. Ponyboy is a very kind-hearted yet tough kid. He hangs out with his kind- greasers. He has a very gentle peronality along with lots of 'tuff' looks. He is also a "straight A" student, unlike his brothers. He enjoys reading.
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3 years ago
Living like Weasels. What is the purpose of the two anecdotes, the story of the naturalist and the story of the eagle?
Pavlova-9 [17]

Answer:

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Explanation:

Annie Dillard wrote “Living Like Weasels”, an essay in which she paints the story of her encounter with a weasel. She explains that from her meeting with the weasel, she developed a great admiration for the weasel’s way of life; Weasels live not by choice, bias, or motive as humans do, but rather out of pure necessity. Dillard relishes the thought of going about life wild and careless as weasels do. She concludes that it’d be best if one would yield to the necessity to simply live as intended.

Dillard sees that the wild weasel has the freedom to live carelessly and solely by necessity; whereas, the way humans choose to live can identify necessity with miscellaneous things and be shaped by bias, motive, etc. If humans could understand the purity in the mindlessness of the weasel’s way of life, each person could live how they wanted, unrestricted by imposed human behavior, societal norms and expectations.

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3 years ago
What are 2 examples of metaphors in Fahrenheit 451?
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Answer: comparing society to a cave (page 34) the pages of the burning looks like butterflies

Explanation:

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4 years ago
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