it will be 12:25 AM
<h3>so Option-D</h3>
<h3>Hope This Helps You ❤️</h3>
Answer:
lexa planted peonles, carnations, and irises in her garden bed
Explanation:
Answer:
A family day to have time to enjoy, play games, chill, cookout, and celebrate the day like it was your last day of being with your family.
The result of an inductive reasoning is a probable one meaning that it might be true based on the arguments. We can observe this characteristics in all of the given options. The title of the speech is a direct mention to the Independence day celebrated in the US. Therefore, the correct answer is the third option.
To Kill a Mockingbird has very little literal connection to the plot, but it carries a great deal of symbolic weight in the book. In this story of innocents destroyed by evil, the “mockingbird” comes to represent the idea of innocence. Thus, to kill a mockingbird is to destroy innocence. Throughout the book, a number of characters (Jem, Tom Robinson, Dill, Boo Radley, Mr. Raymond) can be identified as mockingbirds—innocents who have been injured or destroyed through contact with evil. This connection between the novel’s title and its main theme is made explicit several times in the novel: after Tom Robinson is shot, Mr. Underwood compares his death to “the senseless slaughter of songbirds,” and at the end of the book Scout thinks that hurting Boo Radley would be like “shootin’ a mockingbird.” Most important, Miss Maudie explains to Scout: “Mockingbirds don’t do one thing but sing their hearts out for us. That’s why it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird.” That Jem and Scout’s last name is Finch ( type of small bird) indicates that they are particularly vulnerable in the racist world of Maycomb, which often treats the fragile innocence of childhood harshly. Also an important symbol of the good that exists within people. btw to kill a mocking bird is a great book