Title: 501 my Unforgettable lesson
Please drive slow, someone always waiting for you at home, I learnt this after my road accident while riding a motorcycle. It was a rainy day, I was going for my summer camp tuition classes. As usual while putting my headphones on, my father told me about how unsafe it was to drive with a loud music and forbidden me from over speeding which I used to do. But like every time I didn't put an ear on his advice, and just went out. That was when i learnt that lesson.
On my way back home after my tuition class, as road became very much slippery due to rain but I realized it after my unforgettable incident. I was rushing towards home for no obvious reasons while listing to my favorite songs on full volume. There was a government building near by summer camp with the board written <em>501</em> on it . While crossing it in speed, couldn't listen the horn that a car was honking at me, i just took a wrong decision by overtaking a huge truck without knowing what was coming from the other side collapsed into another motorcycle. And that happened due to my over speeding as i lost control while pushing brake and my motorcycle crashed into another motorcycle coming from the opposite side. It was not a normal accident. The other guy was dead at the moment due to excessive blood lose from his head injury and luckily I just escaped an inch from the death by rolling off from the road. Otherwise I surely could have been crushed by that car which was behind me. After that people took me and called the ambulance. I was admitted in ICU immediately.... and it took me two months to get completely recovered. But whenever I remember this accident which took place in front of the building <em>501</em> it gives me goosebumps and a unforgettable lesson to drive slow all the time.
Answer:
Grendel watches a great horned goat attempt to ascend the cliff side toward the mere. Angered by the goat’s dogged pursuit, Grendel yells at the creature. When the goat does not respond, Grendel reacts by throwing trees and stones at it. The goat continues to climb even after its skull has been split, and appears to continue climbing even after it dies.
That evening, Grendel goes to watch the humans and their daily routines. An old woman tells a group of children about a giant with the strength of thirty thanes who will come across the sea someday. Later that same night, Grendel watches as people gather at the bedside of the ailing Shaper. The Shaper tries to make a prediction about the fate of the Danes, but he dies before he can finish the sentence. About an hour later, the news of the Shaper’s death arrives at the house of a sleeping nobleman, whose middle-aged wife seems to have shared an unspoken, unconsummated love with the Shaper. Grendel watches old women prepare the Shaper for burial, and then he returns home to the mere.
Explanation:
Answer:
What I understood is that everyone has a different view of things. It may not be the same for everyone.
Explanation:
Thanks for posting. I hadn't thought of it before.
The quick answer to this is that they gather leaves to make boats. As a science major, I'm a little doubtful this would work. Those ants covered acres and acres and their size though relatively small, were huge compared to other ants. The surface tension of water with a leaf might be enough to accommodate 20 ants, but that was a spit in the bucket.
Further, this implies that the ants were discriminating enough to stop eating the vegetation (which is the central conflict of the story) and decide that they had to forestall their appetite so they had leaves to cross. Even if they were capable of such higher lever mental abilities, there likely were not enough leaves around to accomplish the crossing.
All of that just so I could answer A
What
is universal theme?
Universal
theme is a motif that can apply to anyone and everyone regardless of ethnicity,
nationality, age, and status.
Knowing this, we can
easily conclude that universal theme is: a theme that speaks broadly to human
experiences. Now some might debate that choice C is correct, however please
note that choice C explicitly states that a theme can only be applied to members
of a "certain culture." That is a fallacy. Universal theme applies to
all humans and human experiences, not just for a select group.