Answer: Moshoeshoe was the first chief and founder of Sotho, a nation in Southern Africa. The people who lived there were called Basutos, and he ended up leading them against armies like the British using diplomacy. He began to raise followers in other tribes because of the success he had with the military. He ended up negotiating peace with a border to separate parts of the land called orange free state. In the mid 1800's, Moshoeshoe won against fighting off Boers, and gained as well as lost land. He ended up asking the british for help, but for a price. Some of his people's land. They agreed, and the land is today called Lesotho.
Answer:
Read the excerpt from The People Could Fly
All them alligators fall in the river, heads over heels. They so hot-boiled, the water go swiiishshshpsssst when they hit it and steam come up like fog.
What do the details in this excerpt most help readers visualize?
what the water smells and tastes like when the alligators fall into it
how long and loudly the young alligators cry after they are burned
how red and raw the young alligators' skin is after they are burned
what the alligators sound and look like when they fall into the water
Explanation:
Answer:
3. david are you going to eat anything?
4. Is she going to stay at the campsite?
5. What are you going to do tomorrow?
6. I am going to see Dennis tonight.
7. Is Alexander going to take the bus?
8. They are not going to play football in the gym.
9. When are you going to give me the book back?
10. Angela is going to spend a week in Poland.
Explanation:
Let's read the text again...
My grandfather the fisherman always told me that the best way to communicate with fish is to drop them a line.
There are three phrases that help us to understand the pun in the text: The grandfather is a fisherman, it means his job is to catch fish, by communicate he means to make the fish come closer, and by drop them a line he means the fishing rod thread.
Taking the above into account the correct answers are:
A.“communicate” and “drop them a line”
B.The pun plays on a phrase that means both to send a note and to attempt to catch a fish.