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Leto [7]
3 years ago
10

4) in a response of two to three sentences, explain how the action described in the following lines helps show grendel as a mons

ter. "he beheld in the hall the heroes in numbers, a circle of kinsmen sleeping together, a throng of thanemen: then his thoughts were exultant, he minded to sunder, from each of the thanemen the life from his body"
English
1 answer:
VashaNatasha [74]3 years ago
6 0
By he minded to sunder , from each of the thane-men the life from his body. <span />
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How does the author think families should spend the family time they take back?
Olin [163]

Families should spend time together doing things they love, catching up on lost time and trying their best to make things right.

I think you forgot to add a picture of the story first but I hope this helps.

5 0
2 years ago
Which line is consistently iambic?
mariarad [96]

The line that is consistently iambic is option B: Understand if you dare.

<h3>What does iambic implies?</h3>

This is known to be a kind of a metrical foot that is made up of one short syllable and this is one that is often accompanied by one long syllable or by a single unstressed syllable accompanied  by one stressed syllable.

Since Iambic meter is said to be the method or pattern of a poetic line that is known to be made up of iambs, it is said to be made up of  two syllables which are the  unstressed syllable and the stressed syllable,

Therefore, The line that is consistently iambic is option B: Understand if you dare because it is made up of two syllable.

Learn more about iambic from

brainly.com/question/17080365

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6 0
2 years ago
Write a five paragraph essay at least 200 words long on a topic of your choice. You must use one of the following essay types.
Vladimir79 [104]
<span>Persuasive Essay
</span><span>
Why There Must Be Qualification Tests for Voting 

</span>

In western democratic societies, people have gotten used to almost absolute freedom: of speech, consciousness, self-expression, gender roles, and so on. Freedom of political will is among the benefits American and European societies enjoy as well; no one can be forced to vote this or that way, and even though during elections politicians fall over themselves to convince the electorate to vote in their favor, there are no guns pressed to voters’ heads: a person is free to vote any way he or she likes, or to not vote at all. At the same time, voting is not just a right: it is also a great responsibility of every member of a society, because each vote contributes to the results of elections, which in their turn will define the way society will have to live until the next election.

And this is probably the greatest catch: since in modern democratic societies a right to vote is granted to any citizen having reached a certain biological age, the political future of each particular society depends on a large mass of random people. In other words, not only knowledgeable, intelligent, conscious, and competent people with reasonable political positions can vote—and this is a problem. Why? Let us figure out why.

He suggests that people who know little to none about politics, how governments and economies work, and how political solutions affect societies—in other words, people ignorant about politics—should not be allowed to vote.

It might sound shocking at first, but people have got so used to their rights and freedoms that even the slightest limitation looks like totalitarianism to them. But, for example, how many Americans unsatisfied with Donald Trump’s rule are there? How quickly has his rating dropped since the moment he was elected a president of the United States? This data can be gathered on the Internet easily, so there is no point in discussing it here; what is important, however, is how Trump became president, and what was his target audience. Attentive observers must have noticed how primitive and naive his speeches were, how easily he blamed everyone, promised to build those infamous walls against migrants, and “Make America great again.. If his electoral base was not so ignorant and craving for quick solutions, it would question their candidate more, and would probably find out that there was no solid basis behind his loud words; as a result, America might have had a different president now, and the whole political course of the country could have been different.

Ignorant and poorly-educated people always make the majority of the population. Ancient Greeks knew that; nowadays praised for inventing the democratic form of rule, Greeks had numerous limitations for those who wanted to participate in the political life of their society. Many of them would be unreasonable to implement today: to tell a long story short, a right to vote belonged only to free male citizens of Ancient Greece’s cities (Inside Loyola), and some Greek city-states also required voters to match additional criteria, such as education or a certain level of income. This way, Greeks filtered those social categories who were biased towards certain subjects; for example, poor people would obviously vote for candidates who promised to make them rich, ignorant and uneducated people would vote for those who promised them unearthly goods and happiness, and so on. By granting the right to vote to few, Greeks ensured that those few were educated, knew about the current problems of the city-state they lived in, understood how the system worked, and were interested in the best possible outcomes for everyone could vote.


The idea of making citizens pass a special test to ensure their ability to make informed decisions during elections might seem limiting and somewhat authoritarian. Many people have got so used to their rights and freedoms that the idea of even the slightest limitation makes them scared. However, there are reasons to believe that qualification tests could not damage, but heal and improve the political system of the United States, because such tests would ensure that, metaphorically speaking, little children will not put forks into electrical sockets—meaning that ignorant people who have no idea about how the United States’ society works will not be able to affect its life through voting during its elections.


there you go, its the whole essay! ;}

<span>


</span>
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3 years ago
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trasher [3.6K]

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Read the sentence.
LenKa [72]

Answer:

answer maybe Whom but who also maybe correct

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