Answer:
A) Students will be allowed to eat lunch on the hill outside of the cafeteria if they keep quiet, avoid entering other buildings, and clean up their trash afterward.
Explanation:
The first part of the answer (if they keep quiet) is alluded to by the first part in the text <em>(can not be noisy)</em>. This phrase does not require a reduction in the level of noise, but a total absence of it.
The second part of the answer (avoid entering other buildings) is alluded to by the third part of the sentence<em> (and not enter other buildings during lunch)</em>. The two phrases change just in word order and selection. The resemblance is clear.
The third part of the answer (clean up their trash afterward) is alluded to by the second part of the sentence <em>(have all their trash picked up)</em>. The two sentences are, again, the same meaning in different word choices.
Answer:
The correct answer is: Not only do they teach Ernesto important life lessons, but they also help him journey to the United States and provide his family with some essentials when they arrive.
Explanation:
Barrio Boy is a story written by Ernesto Galarza that tells the story of a boy from a Mexican family.
Here it is shown how a person's environment defines their future. The experiences of this child in his neighborhood and his interaction with adults are narrated. Then the protagonist and his family have to leave the city due to conflicts with the government.
Many things happen in Ernesto's life, which makes him wonder what his future will be like.
The Modern Language Association (MLA)
style is most commonly used when writing papers and citing the sources within
the liberal arts and humanities. According to this style, the elements should
be listed in the following order: author, title of source, title of container, other
contributors, version, number, publisher, publication date and location.
In this case, the citation according
to the MLA style would be: Atwood, Margaret. Ed. Earl G. Ingersoll. “Waltzing
Again: New and Selected Conversations with Margaret Atwood”. Princeton: Ontario
Review, 2006. Print
c many of us enjoy sampling books from diffrent areas of the world