1. Margaret’s poem is long; however, it is not complicated
2. Margaret does not discuss Madison in this poem; instead, she does tell about her fathers poem
3. The poem mentions Margaret’s mother; therefore, it quotes advice from Ms. Dell
4. Margaret could have refused to write the poem; also, she could have refused to read it to the class
5. The poem was well written; in result, Ms. Pearls was proud of Margaret’s efforts
6. The class did not say anything about the poem; however, they did react to it
7. Maybe no one knew what to say or maybe the student were afraid to say the wrong thing
8. The students were silent; but, Ms. Pearls knew what to write
Answer:
<h3>Agree.</h3>
Explanation:
Yes, rumors, superstitions, or propaganda can replace reason with irrational hysteria when groups of people get together because <u>reason gets undermined when a particular rumor, superstition or propaganda is believed by the majority.</u>
This can be seen in many past as well present instances where baseless claims or propaganda have swept people in great confusion and misunderstanding.
When groups of people start to believe in a particular rumor, superstition or propaganda, <u>the society as a whole eventually start to accept them as facts</u>. Also commonly known as mass hysteria, the general masses fail to reason with facts and create a hostile environment around them.
One of the many examples would be the Soviet propaganda in U.S during the Cold War ear which have caused mass hysteria among the citizens of the country.
I listened to grandpa, mom talking to dad, giving dad advice and the baby banging his block, over and over on the ground.
Answer:
Letter to pen pals. You give this type of letter to somebody you communicate with on a regular basis. ...
Letters to famous people (fan mail) ...
Love letters. ...
Goodbye letters. ...
Get well soon letters. ...
Condolence letters. ...
Thank you letters. ...
Celebration letters.
Explanation:
I think that it is the hand sweeping movement.