Answer:I like Com. Arts the best :D
Explanation:
It was really fun and all of the classmates were friends
The correct answer is B. It explains why Arianna needs the principal to believe her.
Explanation:
In a story, conflicts occur as the main character struggles against another character or element in the story such as nature or society. In the excerpt presented, the conflict between the main character Arianna and the principal develops through their dialogue because as they talk the principal is reluctant to help Arianna even when she tries to convince him.
This conflict can be seen in "Well, let’s get you through this first semester. Then we’ll evaluate how well you’re doing" because the principal denies promoting Arianna to Spanish 3, which is something Arianna needs for an exchange trip. Also, after this, Arianna tries to convince him by showing how much she needs this, which shows her effort for making the principal believe her. According to this, in the dialogue, the conflict develops because "It explains why Arianna needs the principal to believe her" and the way she struggles while trying to get a positive response from the principal.
Answer: "By contrast, the plantation had only one purpose: to create a single product that could be grown, ground, boiled, dried, and sold to distant markets."
Explanation: the author's claim in this excerpt is that the idea of the plantation, was revolutionary to the world of sugar because they could do all the process from planting the sugar cane to making the sugar, all in one place, it says that never in human history had farms be run like that, they always had multiple products to work on. The phrase that better represents that claim is option B.
<span>The literary techique used here is a kenning.
A kenning is a miniature riddle that usually had two parts and was frequently hyphenated. An example of a kenning from Beowulf was "dread-loom." The Anglo-Saxons used this term to refer to God's plan, making a comparison beween weaving and the awe inspired by God's plan.
"Wolf-of-the-waves" is used here to describe Grendel's mother, a beast who lived underwater.</span>
I would just tell him up straight ... tell him I don’t fell comfortable with you going to the party by yourself.