Idk if it’s just me but you can’t really see the questions
First Answer: During my visit to the shelter, I learned that its two paid staff members and 13 volunteers spend time with every animal.
Reason: it is the only statement that shows concern and care for animals.
Second answer: It starts, obviously, with being the best student that you can be.
Third answer: Logical fallacy.
Fourth Answer: Improving opportunities in math for young girls will decrease economic dispairity in US.
Reason: I think it does not make sense for improving something makes it worse.
Answer:
To correctly punctuate the sentence, we must:
A. Add a comma after the word dark.
D. Add a comma after the word evil.
Explanation:
We must use a comma to separate coordinate adjectives in a sentence. Coordinate adjectives have the same degree of importance in the structure and describe the same noun. The sentence we are analyzing here uses coordinate adjectives in "evil mad scientist" and "dark distant mountains". However, the punctuation is off. To correct it, we must add a comma after "evil" and another after "dark":
- The unicorns know of an evil, mad scientist who lives beyond those dark, distant mountains.
The war that <span>wars did John Steinbeck's "Symptoms" and Tim O'Brien's "Ambush" was discussed happened in </span>D) the Civil War and World War I. There ideas are different because Steinbeck’s “Symptoms” discuss the aftereffects of war on soldiers while O’Brien’s tone toward soldiers <span>and victims of war is sympathetic in which there will be guilt after the war.</span>
Answer:
The significance of the phrase is:
C. ironically shows a rich man needing a wife, when women in those days needed one more significantly for financial stability.
Explanation:
This is the opening line in Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice"<u>. </u><u>The whole idea of a rich man needing a wife as a universal truth is ironic, and Austen's novel is proof of that. The whole plot is based on women searching for potential husbands as a means to secure their financial stability.</u> <u>Of course, that was never the purpose of the main character and her favorite sister, who would both much rather marry for love than for money.</u> Still, <u>they end up marrying extremely wealthy man who, in a sense, rescue them from being left in a dire situation once their father comes to die. </u><u>Their mother and sisters,</u><u> on the other hand, do not share their ideology, and</u><u> openly look for matches that are well settled in life to provide for them.</u>