MARK "BRAINLIEST" FOR MORE!
A. Once I found a bees.
B. that dance on the breeze.
A. without trying to sting me.
B. and flew around with ease.
MARK "BRAINLIEST" FOR MORE!
Answer:
I woke up to the sound of a loud banging on my door. Weary from last night's party, I scrambled to find my glasses. The loud banging almost hurt my ears. I quickly opened the door, not knowing who or what was behind it. As I carefully pulled the door, a woman in black dress and a black veil stood before my eyes. She didn't say a word. I stood there frozen. I wanted to run, but I couldn't. Then, the woman lifted her veil and started screaming "What did you do to me?" Now, I realized, her face was covered with blood. I pushed her away and run as fast as I could. To my surprise, I fell down the stairs and I opened my eyes. I was back in my room, sweating with all my might. Thank God, it was all a dream!
Duty, in a way, contributed to the shallowness and failure of Ivan's life. Not because duty in itself is bad, but because it has become Ivan's only preoccupation, apart from pleasant life. Tolstoy's negative view of duty is seen in the second half of this sentence: "he considered his duty all things that were so designated by people in authority". So, we are talking about duty as Ivan sees it, and Ivan sees it as it was designated by people in authority. That means, Ivan structures his life and his priorities according to the view of those above him. His only ambition is to try and climb the social ladder. When he fails to do it, he is disappointed and has to find another obsession - of course, materialistic one. And that is the decoration of his new house. That's when he falls down and injures himself - so, indirectly, his materialism has cost him his health and, ultimately, his life.
<span>A) radioactive decay inside earth.</span>
In this poem, a speaker describes the effects of Rosa Parks refusing to give up her seat on the bus for a white passenger. As you read, take notes on who “the Many” and “the Few” are. ... To celebrate the ride that marks The debt the Many owe the Few, That day of freedom grew into The Century of Rosa Parks.
Patrick Lewis' poem “The Many and the Few,” a speaker describes the historic moment when Rosa Parks refused to give her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama. As we read, we will be discussing the theme of Social Change & Revolution as it relates to the text.