I think the answer is A. I hope I helped.
Answer:
1) Growing up on the moon was amazing. Every night I watched the little marble of a planet rotate throughout the night sky. It was beautiful. One time I remember seeing beautiful lights hanging over the planet. Now that I live on this beautiful marble, I learned that it was the northern lights. They're amazing! :)
2) Good Morning, everybody! Today we're talking about space stations and the history of the space stations. Not a lot of people have been in space, but a long time ago on July 20th, 1969 men walked on the moon. Things have been a lot different these days, since we're getting ready to launch our mission to living on Mars in a few years! Things may be different, but their still amazing events!
Explanation:
Hope this helps! Plz mark as brainliest! :)
Teenage pregnancy<span> is a situation which involves female </span>adolescents<span>. A teenage </span>female<span> can be </span>pregnant<span> as early as age twelve or thirteen, although it is usually fourteen and older. The fact that teenagers become pregnant is related to many factors. These are related to the specific situation of the teenager, and the group that she interacts with. The rates of teenage pregnancy vary from </span>country<span> to country and are related to differences of </span>sexual<span> activities, the general </span>sex education<span> being provided and </span>contraceptives<span> being available.
hope i helped can i plllzzz have brainest </span>
Scout, in her mature naivete, states what it means quite succinctly:
In Maycomb, grown men stood outside in the front yard for only two reasons: death and politics. I wondered who had died. Jem and I went to the front door, but Atticus called, "Go back in the house."
The reflects the kind of small-town mentality exhibited throughout the story. Men only call you out into your yard to relay the news of a death, or to express support or disapproval for political candidates and causes. Scout doesn't understand the true nature of the mob appearing (although she will later in the chapter), so she asks "who had died." Atticus clearly does understand, as he orders his children back into the house.
Aunt Alexandra does not directly state her thoughts on Tom's innocence of guilt, but she does express her ideas about Atticus defending him. Scout relates that she heard the end of a conversation between Atticus and Aunt Alexandra, in which Atticus tells her that he's:
". . . in favor of Southern womanhood as much as anybody, but not for preserving polite fiction at the expense of human life," a pronouncement that made me suspect they had been fussing again.
I sought Jem and found him in his room, on the bed deep in thought. "Have they been at it?" I asked.
"Sort of. She won't let him alone about Tom Robinson. She almost said Atticus was disgracin' the family Scout.
Thus, it doesn't really matter to Aunt Alexandra whether or not Tom is innocent, or whether or not he gets a fair trial. All she cares about, as she proves time & time again, is the family name. To her, Atticus' defense of a black man is akin to disgrace for an old, established family like the Finches. Of course, she may truly think Tom deserves a fair trial, but she doesn't want her brother to be the one to ensure he gets it.
Hope this helped! (;
A company plans to make space flights available to those who can afford the ticket price.