Answer:When i dont drink enough water i get dizzy
Explanation:
Answer:
The war.
Explanation:
F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby" revolves around the character of Jay Gatsby and his 'lost American dream'. Though narrated by another character, Nick Carraway, the novel focuses on Gatsby, his life, his desire for Daisy, the theme of status, greed, betrayal, lost love, etc.
In Chapter 3, Nick had gone to Gatsby's party after being invited. Though he knows his neighbor's name is Gatsby and that he would often throw parties, he hadn't actually met the man himself. While there at the party, he was conversing with Jordan at a table where there was a <em>"man of about [his] age"</em>. That man started a conversation with him, asking if he had been <em>"in the Third Division during the war"</em>, to which Nick replied that he <em>"was in the Ninth Machine-Gun Battalion."</em> The man then declared that he <em>"was in the Seventh Infantry until June nineteen-eighteen." </em>Shortly after this encounter, Nick discovered that the man was Gatsby himself after Gatsby remarked, <em>"I'm Gatsby."</em>
<h2><em>I had a same question just like that but i didn't get it </em></h2>
Given sentence :
- She asked me 'What time are we going to leave tomorrow?
Answer :
- She asked me that at what time were we going to leave the next day.
Some rules of conversion of statements :
- The reporting verb "said" is changed into "told" .
- The inverted commas are removed and "that" is placed instead.
- If the reporting verb is in the present or future tense, the tense of the verb in the reported speech is not changed.
- If the reported speech expresses some "universal truth" or "habitual action", the tense of the verb is not changed
The Maori: Genealogies and Origins in New Zealand contrasts with "The Raven and the First Men: The beginnings of the Haida" in the following way. The Raven is a central character in Haida mythology. He is sometimes known as a trickster, but the Haida believe that Raven is a complex reflection of myself. In Maori mythology the Maori believe there was nothing. The original parents, the Earth mother and the Sky father came from this nothingness. They had 70 male children who, in turn, became the gods of the Maori.