Answer:
I need more context to answer. For example what was the summary and what was it about. I'll also need the options!
The answers are C and D: storm and bird.
Emily Dickinson talked a lot about <em>nature</em>. In this excerpt from "Hope is the Thing with Feathers" the nouns<em> storm and bird</em> are presented.
Bird (<em>represents </em><em>Hope </em><em> that never stops, is sweetest in the Gale, and keep so many warm</em>): "'Hope' is the thing with feathers"; "that perches in the soul"; "sings the tune without words"
Storm (<em>an agitated </em><em>soul </em>): "And sore must be the storm --that could abash the little Bird.
Answer:
It’s either B or A
Explanation:
Bridges for bears and tunnels for tortoises have significantly reduced the number of wildlife-car collisions worldwide. Roaring traffic doesn't stop big mammals like moose and bears from crossing highways—nor does it keep myriad smaller creatures from being squished by car tires.
hope dis helps ^-^
In question 1 this is an opion based question you think to youre self about how you feel about theese pepole inthe book
like the paragraph said the quarky and unpredictable pepole are round the boring ones are flar=t take the names that are given and determine if they are round or flat