Answer:
bet (may need to fix my spelling but)
Explanation:
Learnig how to read is a very important skill to know how to do, there are a vast majority of people who already know how to read but to the few who dont know how, I can imagine life for them can be very difficult.
Knowing how to read (and write) is very import because we use it in our daily lives from driving, shopping, and even communicating. wheather that be texts or emails, for friends, schooling, your job. it is very important to know how to read.
If you never learn to read you'll never be able to drive, shop, or communicate to others independantly, you'll never be able to read news articals or books.
it is very important to learn how to obtain the skill of reading at a younge age because it is something you'll use for years to come. from reading road signs, to food menus, to taxes, to resumes, without being able to read, your teen-adult self will be the one to struggle the very most.
(hope this helps lol)
I was found in the ground only to be brought up by rain left alone in a, field I bury back in yet I still feel the same
try living in my shoes they won’t fit
because I live in the earth
The answer is the second choice
Answer:
"Thus it was, grandchildren, that I began my day as Kii Yazhi and ended it as Ned Begay.”
Significance of this statement:
The story of how he ended up with a different name at the end of the day is the meaning of this statement to me. Because the white teacher didn't understand their language and didn't realize that Biye means "son of" in Navajo, there were so many Begays. So he gave him the name Biye, spelled "Begay" as he had heard it. Other white men followed suit. That's why there are so many Begay Navajo families. He was relieved that he didn't have another John for a first name. The white man was tired of writing the name John by the time he got to him. As a result, he was given the same first name as the teacher's uncle, "Ned," who had died.
Answer:
Sui
Explanation:
Almost every character who dies in the three Theban plays does so at his or her own hand (or own will, as is the case in ). Jocasta hangs herself in and Antigone hangs herself in Eurydice and Haemon stab themselves at the end of Oedipus inflicts horrible violence on himself at the end of his first play, and willingly goes to his own mysterious death at the end of his second. Polynices and Eteocles die in battle with one another, and it could be argued that Polynices’ death at least is self-inflicted in that he has heard his father’s curse and knows that his cause is doomed. Incest motivates or indirectly brings about all of the deaths in these plays.