The correct option is “user guide”. A user guide provides instructions on how to use a product, its main characteristics and functions. For example, a TV user guide explains how to turn it on, how to program it and how to solve certain technical problems. In this case the phrase “product encyclopedia” compares an encyclopedia with the user guide as all the necessary information about the product is included there.
Dear, Local Newspaper
I don't think this is a very great idea. If you guys would write the paper and express why it shouldn't be done, that would help a lot. If Casinos were built next to a learning environment, that would encourage more and more kids to gamble as adults. This is a bad influence, as they will lead up to terrible lives. Kids are at school to learn, and with a Casino nearby, this would interrupt this. It is highly inappropriate, and completely unnecessary. If the Casino happens to be robbed, what ensures that the students nearby will be safe. These are my biggest concerns.
From,
[Name]
Already wrote this twice somewhere else, but here you go!
The correct answer is satire.
Twain is being very satirical when he wrote about Jim and Huck talking about King Solomon. According to the Bible, King Solomon was the wisest man of them all, but Huck doesn't understand how that could be possible due to what he learned about such people during his life. So Twain tried to mock formal education and religion through this discussion.
This is a pretty long poem, and a lot goes on, but Tennyson makes it easier to follow along by breaking the action up into four parts. We'll take you through them quickly, to give you an overview:
Part 1: The poem opens with a description of a field by a river. There's a road running through the field that apparently leads to Camelot, the legendary castle of King Arthur. From the road you can see an island in the middle of the river called the Island of Shalott. On that island there is a little castle, which is the home of the mysterious Lady of Shalott. People pass by the island all the time, on boats and barges and on foot, but they never see the Lady. Occasionally, people working in the fields around the island will hear her singing an eerie song.
Part 2: Now we actually move inside the castle on the island, and Tennyson describes the Lady herself. First we learn that she spends her days weaving a magic web, and that she has been cursed, forbidden to look outside. So instead she watches the world go by in a magic mirror. She sees shadows of the men and women who pass on the road, and she weaves the things she sees into her web. We also learn that she is "half sick" of this life of watching and weaving.
Part 3: Now the big event: One day the studly Sir Lancelot rides by the island, covered in jewels and shining armor. Most of this chunk of the poem is spent describing Lancelot. When his image appears in the mirror, the Lady is so completely captivated that she breaks the rule and looks out her window on the real world. When she does this and catches a glimpse of Lancelot and Camelot, the magic mirror cracks, and she knows she's in trouble.
<span>Part 4: Knowing that it's game over, the Lady finds a boat by the side of the river and writes her name on it. After looking at Camelot for a while she lies down in the boat and lets it slip downstream. She drifts down the river, singing her final song, and dies before she gets to Camelot. The people of Camelot come out to see the body of the Lady and her boat, and are afraid. Lancelot also trots out, decides that she's pretty, and says a little prayer for her.
</span>
Answer:
B. The author implies that other women are jealous of Georgia’s beauty
Explanation: