True
It's easy to be anonymous online which makes it easy to anonymously cyber bully.
The event now known as “the voyage of the Beagle” comprises Charles Darwin’s circumnavigation as ship’s naturalist on the second of three surveying voyages by H.M.S. Beagle<span>; the writings published as his first book, the </span>Journal of Researches<span>; and the genesis of his theory of evolution by natural selection. Writing between regimes of world-knowledge, Darwin mediates scientific observation through the language of aesthetics, and seeks to understand the convergence of disparate scales of geological and human history.</span>
Okay. Simply make a story with the negative pre-fixes of the words you put in as your answers.
"I fumbled with the keys, determined to unlock the stubborn door, and when I finally did, I walked inside, letting out a sigh of relief. I dropped the keys on the nearest table, and headed upstairs, my footsteps thumping on the wooden staircase. I gently unwrapped the wool sweater from my shoulders, sighing gently, thinking of all the things left to do. Three of my luggages, all filled to the brim, waited in the garage, and I had to unpack them, but I had little to no effort left in me. Sadness clouded my mind. I hated feeling pathetic, and letting myself feel pathetic, but—I just felt so unlucky.
Shaking away the feeling, I took a look around the my best friend's room. Barbara's room was untidy, her clothes, pillows, and books strewn everywhere carelessly. I couldn't help but feel uncertain as I hung my sweater on a nearby chair and headed towards her, a sad little heap on her bed."
How does this sound?
it's d I believe hope it's right
Answer:
There are hints in the story that suggests that Mon-t-re-sor considered Fortun-ato to be naive.
And, Mon-t-re-sor did not regret Fortun-ato's ignorance.
Explanation:
'The Cask of Amon-tillado' is a short story written by Edgar Allan Poe. The story is a revenge narration of Mont-resor, who is confessing his crime to someone fifty years later after he committed the crime.
From the stories, one can find clues that Mont-resor considered Fortun-ato to be a fool. When he states <em>'I was so pleased to see him, that I thought I should never have done wrin-gi-ng his hand.' </em>
Mont-resor also never regretted Fortun-ato's ignorance rather he was pleased that he did not have to wr-ing his hand to exert his plan.