Answer:
c
Explanation:
It helps you understand and remember what you read
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
What Lincoln wishes to do through this final sentence of the speech is:
C. stir up emotions about the lives lost in the war and  encourage the listener to help end it.
Explanation:
This whole excerpt is the final sentence of Lincoln's Address. What the president was doing was inspiring his audience. He wants them to feel responsible for bringing about peace and taking care of the fallen soldiers' families. He wants the nation to be united, Americans to see one another as brothers and sisters. His final sentence is urging the audience to do so. It is their duty to finish the work they have started and accomplish what is best for the whole nation.
 
        
             
        
        
        

I don't recommend using the first person pronoun in an argumentative essay. Unless your instructor suggests that you do so, omit it from the assignment because your writing will read better without it.
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer: She should not. 
Explanation:
Every profession has a range of salaries that practitioners in that profession might earn from the lowest salary possible to the highest. For instance, Carpenters in the United States can expect a yearly salary of between $41,784 and $72,987. 
The Median figure refers to the figure in the middle of this range and separates what those in the upper half of the range will get from those in the lower half. It is not a given that a person will earn the median salary as they may earn lower or higher than it depending on multiple factors such as  education, location, additional skills, number of years in the profession, etc. 
 
        
             
        
        
        
Hilda 'H.D.' Doolittle, Ezra Pound, and Richard Aldington were the pioneers of modernist poetry, writing in rejection of the formalism of Victorian poetry and European society. World War I had a profound effect on the further development of the modernist movement. The poetry that followed World War I reflected the disillusionment of those who had experienced the tragedy and horror of modern combat. T.S. Eliot's 'The Wasteland' is an example of the disjointed and fragmented verse arising from this disillusionment.