Good looks mean nothing without a good personality or trust, so I would put that on the bottom. I would say:
1) Personality
2) Trust
3) Looks
Trust and personality are tricky, but personality is on top purely because a spouse with a bad personality will be very unhealthy to be around.
Answer:
He likes to read
Explanation:
pretty self-explanatory here.
Answer:
A. " . . . they [the children] made fun of him because he would not play games or fly kites, or because he mispronounced some word. . ."
Explanation:
'Tiger-Tiger' is a part of the collective stories in 'The Jungle Book' written by Rudyard Kipling. In this story, Mowgli leaves the jungle and decides to go live in human society, after driving the Sher Khan out of the jungle. When Mowgli comes to a village, he gets adopted by a wealthy family, who lost their son.
The theme that the rules of society don't benefit the needs of the individual is developed in option A. Mowgli is a jungle boy, brought up by a wolf pack in jungle, now he lives among human, his own kind, but, in both cases Mowgli remained an outcast. In jungle he was weak among the animals and the beast, but among humans he proved to be as strong as a bull.
In the statement, in option A, the narrator describes how the rules of society didn't fit Mowgli. When he was in jungle he learned to control his temperament. But when children made fun of him, he wanted to break them in two pieces.
Therefore, option A is correct.
In his book "Children of the Drug Wars", Damon Barret evaluates the impact that war has on children and on drugs.
The underlined words and phrases support the author's purpose because they (a) draw attention to the opinion that the United States is not doing enough to help these children. Those words and phrases communicate Barret's view that these children receive a <em>"death sentence"</em> or that the nation has <em>"turned its back"</em> on them.