1. A good resource for information on used cars is Kelly blue book.
2. New Cars depreciate the most as soon as you take ownership and drive off the lot.
3. You should buy a new car if you expect to put a lot of mileage on it, plan to keep it for a long period of time and think the vehicle will experience a lot of damage or wear. The answer is all of the above choices.
4. Retail value is also known as the sticker value.
Answer:
They can put a cliffhanger at the end of the chapter
Explanation:
They can bring in words like "what I saw was absurd.."
you should probably post the questions
Answer/Explanation:
A: Trips take people who take Travel Sac
E: Searched up travel proverbs and twisted one
A: Travel Sac travels with you
E: Used repetition
A: Travel like you mean it
E: It popped into my head. Travel Sac seems like a pretty serious bag so
A: Travel anytime, anywhere, anyhow
E: Modified an existing slogan
A: Carry the need to travel
E: I have no idea. Like need for speed but need to travel.
A: Fulfill the need to travel
E: modified from the above.
I did more so you can choose since they aren't great.
(This was kind of fun I don't know. No it was a bit painfully difficult and cringey.)
By the way you misspelled traveler as "traverler" in the last blurb.
Answer:
The answer will be multiple-part.
Explanation:
"Your courage to the sticking place" is a well-known statement - from Shakespeare's play Macbeth. The idiom screw... to the sticking place - if you do some research - is defined as "being firm and resolute in... (in this case, courage)." This echoes Shakespeare's ambitious nature - as is shown in a poetic style.
The rest of this paragraph reflects that aspect of him as well. Such words as:
Wassail
Warder
Limbeck
Swinish
Spongy
Quell
Though seemingly just part of the nature of poetry, these words may spark images in your mind that typical, everyday words otherwise don't.
I hope you can gather a lot of info from all of that! Tell me if you need any further assistance...
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