Statements can have more than one counterexample. True.
When you make an inference while reading<span>, you use clues from the story and your own knowledge to guess about things the </span>author<span> doesn't say directly. As you read “</span>Raymond's Run<span>,” make inferences to better understand the main character's </span>feelings<span>, </span>thoughts<span>, and ideas. Record your inferences in equations</span>
In "The Storyteller", by Saki, the theme that is best supported by the story the bachelor tells is <em>Pride comes before a fall.</em>
There are three children with their aunt on a train. They are boisterous. She tries to entertain them with a story about a good girl to whom good things happen. As the children are bored by it the bachelor, who travels in the same train tells them a story about a girl who is "horribly good". She has a lot of medals pinned in her dress and a wolf finds her because her medals make noise. Excessive pride comes before something bad makes you realize that you are not so good.
Explanation:
Last Duchess" by Robert Browning
1. How would you describe the Duke/the speaker of this poem? Why do you
think this? Support it with quotes from the poem that make you think this.
Answer:
Life is pointless without justice.
Explanation:
Would you like to live in a world where you didn't get the freedom you deserve?
You paid for your food, so shouldn't you get it?
Every person in that room did everything they could to get justice.