Mental illness in no way makes you weak.
Social media CAN cause depression in teens but doesn't always.
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Your answer would be C. The structure of a text makes it easier to read if paragraphs are shorter and are adequately spaced.
In English Language Arts there are so many rules we have to follow for when we write. We have to make sure our grammar is correct and the amount of spacingwe use, the words we use, the format of how something should look, When you research information you have to paraphrase what you out in your essay from where you got it so it won't show plagiarism and to prev not that, it is called citing sources, but if you don't cite the source then that will be taken as plagiarism, which is stealing somebody's else's work claiming it as your own. Then on the essays you write, you have to make sure to add the correct things of what your talking about and not go off into another topic that is not relevant.
There's alot to learn in ELA, it may not seem like it now if your young but when it's gets to college level to writing 20 paged papers that's when it gets harder.
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Answer:
These are referred to as <u>adverbs.</u> Adverbs are words that modify a sentence, and often end with a prefix of <em>ly-</em>. For example, "I walk to the park slowly". That sentence has an adverb, <em>slowly</em>, which modifies the sentence so we know that the writer is slowly walking to the park. Now, without that adverb, we would not know that the writer is slowly walking to the park, we would just know they are walking to the park. That is how adverbs modify sentences.
'Horse of another color' is the opposite expression from Shakespeare's 'a horse of that color' in the Twelfth Night Act 2 Scene 3 where Maria told Sir Toby Belch that her purpose was indeed a horse of that color which meant that Sir Toby Belch got the same idea as hers. So, 'horse of another color' is an idea different from the other.
<span> "Ambush," O’Brien describes killing a man while serving in war. He had no intention of killing him—he reacted without thinking. O’Brien feels guilty about having killed another human being, even though his fellow soldier tries to soothe him with the logic that the man would have been killed eventually anyway. However, trying to justify having killed someone, O’Brien explains that his training as a soldier prompted him to act involuntarily when he lobbed the grenade upon spotting an enemy soldier. Twenty years later, long after the war has ended, O’Brien is unable to admit to his daughter, Kathleen, that he has killed another person. He feels guilt and denial about having killed a man, and experiences recurrent flashbacks and visions. Through his story, O’Brien conveys that a soldier is a changed person after he has witnessed such a war, and those who have not been in a war cannot begin to understand the emotional turmoil that soldiers go through.</span>