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olganol [36]
4 years ago
6

I am not now thinking of the loss of property involved, immense and serious as that is, but only for the wanton and wholesale de

struction of the lives of non-combatants, men, women, and children, engaged in pursuits which have always, even in the darkest periods of modern history, been deemed innocent and legitimate. Property can be paid for; the lives of peaceful and innocent people cannot be. Which statement best describes the main idea of the excerpt?
English
2 answers:
tia_tia [17]4 years ago
7 0

Answer:

It's C. Human lives are worth more than material items.

Explanation:

correct on edg

Ratling [72]4 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Human lives are worth more than material items.

Explanation:

The passage was taken from Woodrow Wilson's speech, "War Message to Congress." After reading it, we can conclude that this specific part of the speech discusses the importance of human lives. In a war, property is lost. Even though property is valuable, it can be paid for, it can be built again. But, as Wilson says, "the lives of peaceful and innocent people cannot be". Human lives should, therefore, be the priority of those responsible for governing the country.

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Bogdan [553]

Answer:

B. context clues

Explanation:

All four options are useful and valid to determine the meaning of <em>heatstroke</em> in the text, however, the context clues strategy is the one that will give you a more accurate idea of the meaning of the word. This strategy consists of looking at the surrounding information of an unknown word in order to infer its meaning; and since the text is very descriptive about what this term is, by reading it, we can see all the context clues and learn that <em>heatstroke</em> is a "medical condition" and that "it occurs when the body’s internal temperature becomes so elevated that its cooling system begins shutting down".

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Complete the sentences. Use the present perfect – positive or negative. My mum isn't at home now. She __went_________ (go) to th
4vir4ik [10]

Answer:

We use the Present Perfect to talk about actions or events in the past that still have an effect on the present moment. The focus is on the result.

Negative sentences

To talk about actions that haven’t happened in recent past, we use negative sentences in Present Perfect.

To make negative statements in the Present Perfect, we use:

have / has + not + Past Participle

Singular Plural

I have not (haven’t) visited

You haven’t visited

He/she/it hasn’t visited We haven’t visited

You haven’t visited

They have not visited

Questions in Present Perfect

We use Present Perfect tense to ask and answer questions about actions or events in the past that still have an effect on the present moment.

To make questions in the Present Perfect, we should use the following structure:

have / has + subject + Past Participle

Have you lived here all your life?

Have you met Ted?

Yes/No questions

To create a question that will be answered with a ‘yes’ or ‘no’, use ‘has‘ / ‘have‘ (or ‘hasn’t‘ / ‘haven’t‘ for a negative question) + Past Participle form of the verb.

Singular Plural

Have I visited?

Have you visited?

Has he/she/it visited?

Has we visited?

Have you visited?

Have they visited?

Has she seen the latest James Bond movie?

It’s 11 o’clock already. Have you cleaned up your bedroom?

Have you been in France? No, I haven’t.

Note: In short positive answers to the Present Perfect questions we use only full forms of ‘have’/’has’. In short negative answers we can also use short forms.

Have you read this book?

Yes, I have (No, I haven’t).

Has he ever played golf?

Yes, he has (No, he hasn’t).

We often use the adverb ‘ever‘ when asking questions about events in people’s lives. In such questions we put ‘ever‘ before the past participle:

Have you ever been to Australia?

Has she ever tried your cooking?

Have they ever met each other?  

We often use the adverb ‘yet‘ when asking questions about actions or events that could have just happened:

Have you seen Mary yet?

Have you eaten all apples yet?

Special questions

Special questions (also known as wh-questions) are questions that require more information in their answers. They are made using wh- words such as what, where, when, why, which, who, how, how many, how much.

To make a special question, use the same word order as with yes-no questions but put a wh-word before the verb ‘have’ or ‘has’. The structure is:

wh-word + have / has + [subject] + Past Participle

What famous people have you seen?

What languages has he studied?

How much money has she spent today?

Use ‘How long…?’ to ask for how much time a situation has continued:

How long has she lived in Rotterdam? – She has lived in Rotterdam for six years.

See also:

Present Perfect: Statements

Present Perfect for Unfinished Past

Present Perfect with ‘Just’ and ‘Yet’

Present Perfect for Experience

4 0
3 years ago
What is the correct meaning of the word idling?
PtichkaEL [24]

Answer:

In this context, idling means loafing.

3 0
3 years ago
Which sentence uses the same meaning of the underlined word in the sentence below?
Gnesinka [82]

Answer:

? Where are the answer choices...?

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
Which of these excerpts from Beowulf most directly describes the outcome of the conflict between Beowulf and Grendel’s mother?
marissa [1.9K]

Actually, the correct choice would be A. "....the battle's only survivor/swam up and away from those silent corpses...".

I just took the whole unit test, C. Was wrong.


It's A.

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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