Answer:
Explanation:
Technically flawed?
What a strange assessment. It might lack grammatically accepted rules. So what?
The content is much more important than any grammatical conventions. That is about the last thing you should think about when reading what she said. The last thing.
What is really important is that she is the mother of 13. She is one of the first women to realize how unjust the system is when considering women. She is blasting the system for being what it was. She rightly and courageously sees that she can do the work of men, and take the same punishment as men, but she is not afraid to speak out against the injustice she feels about her environment.
She's ahead of her time. She's a forerunner of the modern women who got the vote in 1920 and managed to convince Wilson to sponsor the 19th Amendment.
That's why she should be regarded as the courageous strong willed woman that she was. And she is a woman!
The first one is better in my opinion
Answer: Use the prefix with opposite meaning (usually un-) with each word or remove the prefix entirely
Explanation:
unfortunate -> fortunate
overstated -> understated
satisfactory -> unsatisfactory
acceptable -> unacceptable
unmatched -> matched
inhale -> exhale
It seemed to be that these people don't connect very well and do't have the sam state of mind. This is causing issues and some friction in their relationship. "I'd known what he'd say—that it was an ugly hack, that I needed to think it through better". This shows that this character expects the negative response from Jolu.
Answer:
Option One
Option Two
Option Three
Option Four
Explanation:
MLA citations always start with the author's name in the following format: Last name, First name.
Next is the title of the source. It goes in quotation marks with the period at the end.
Next is the container which holds the source. Since the article is from a magazine, write the full title of the magazine, in italics, and then add a comma.
Lastly is the publication date and the page range.
The full citation would look like this:
Steven, Fiona. "GM Foods--Not Good For You." <em>Food and Health</em>, 4 Sept. 2013, pp. 89-90.
Hope that helps.