Answer:
Handi-Clean won a large contract to create a new product line.
Explanation:
Answer:
where are the "check all that apply" answers!?!
Explanation:
Answer:
Anagnos and Annie discuss Annie's future student, and Annie wonders about her potential.
Explanation:
"The Miracle Worker" based off Helen Keller's autobiography "The Story of My Life" revolves around the events that led Helen to start her life from being deaf and blind to someone who can almost do anything despite her disability.
The passage from the text shows the teacher Annie Sullivan and Anagnos, a stocky bearded man discussing the future student of Miss Annie. She has been recruited/ hired by the Kellers to try to help their disabled daughter learn about her disability and maybe even life a life. As a teacher/ helper of numerous special needs children, Miss Annie immediately wonders what potential the new student might have and how she will have to approach her.
The answer is 'C'-Crackling is the ononatopeia or sound that wood makes when it burns.
Hello!! The answer on plato is:
Each stanza provides a slightly different perspective of the woman reaping and singing in a field. The first sets the scene: a rustic vale, or valley, filled with the woman's voice. The second stanza compares her song to that of a cuckoo bird and a nightingale. Each bird is associated with a distant location—the Arabian sands and the "farthest" Hebrides. In the third stanza, the speaker wonders what the words of the song might be: Are they epic or personal? Are they about battles or the repeated sorrows of life? The last stanza describes how the reaper's song affected the speaker. He says the song will "have no ending" because it will stay in his memory.
This stanza structure helps express the theme of the natural beauty of a country woman's song, which is as good as or better than that of songbirds. Because he can't understand the words, the speaker listens to them in much the same way as he'd listen to a bird's song. As a field-worker, the woman also represents the value of someone whose art has developed without training. This quality echoes Wordsworth's belief in poetry that is accessible to people of all classes.