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Mashutka [201]
3 years ago
13

Write an objective summary of Chapter 4 of Frankenstein. As you develop this summary, make sure to include the important actions

and events from this chapter of the story. Also, describe how the chapter develops themes to produce a complex account.
English
1 answer:
BigorU [14]3 years ago
7 0

Victor assaults his investigations with excitement and, overlooking his public activity and his family far away in Geneva, gains quick ground. Later, Ardently dedicating himself to this work, he ignores everything else; family, companions, studies, and public activity, and becomes progressively pale, desolate, and fixated.

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Turn the following ten words, which are in italics in the passage,
Yakvenalex [24]

Answer:

prevalence → verb → to prevail

potentially → noun → potential

vulnerable → noun → vulnerability

accessible → verb → to access

censorship → adverb → censorious

volunteer → adjective → voluntary

dubious → noun → dubiousness

system → adjective → systematic

regular → verb → to regulate

suitability → verb​ → to suit

Explanation:

In the English language, especially when it comes to words originated from Latin, it is common to change words with the addition or removal of certain parts -- the affixes. Notice, for example, that to transform "vulnerable" into a noun, we added a suffix (an ending): "vulnerability". On the other hand, to transform "censorship" into an adverb, we changed suffixes: "censorious". It is important to know and understand the use of affixes. They are a helpful means to figure out the meanings of new words.

4 0
3 years ago
Please help me I need a body paragraph 1 for the article teens are going to extremes with texting I NEED A PARAGRAPH ​
Ksju [112]

Answer: (Copied this off a website.. Hope this helps, thought :D

Explanation: The national obsession with instantaneous communication is taking a toll on teens so severe that some experts are calling it a crisis.

It's not the phenomenon of cell-phoning or messaging while driving -- both are illegal in

New Jersey

-- but all-night texting that is leaving too many teens too tired for school.

One 14-year-old New Jerseyan featured in a recent Star-Ledger story receives up to 10,000 -- 10,000! -- text messages a month. To accomplish that astounding yet not unusual feat, she interrupts her showers and stays up all night long, thumbs pumping, to read and respond to an avalanche of messages. Doctors are beginning to recognize such obsession as addiction that is robbing children of sleep at the very time in their life when they need it the most.

A well-publicized study recently found that early high school start times deprive adolescents of sleep and force students to perform academically in the early morning, a time of day when they are at their worst. Many teens are making a tough situation worse by shortchanging themselves of the time they do have to sleep. The inevitable results are poor performance, a sort of sleepwalking through classes and the day in a fog that some physicians liken to drunkenness.

According to a recent Nielsen study, 13- to 17-year-olds send or receive an average of 1,742 text messages a month -- more than seven times the average number of calls they place on their cell phones. That represents huge chunks of time dedicated to the flimsiest of patter. Here, truly, the medium is the message, and teens are loath to part with a gadget which to them seems as natural as breathing.

It's a situation made all the more challenging by the fact that these kids are among the first to have this amazing, and tempting, technology right at their fingertips; it's not likely they will set limits for themselves. They depend on their parents for rules and guidelines in all other areas of life, so it's naive to believe they will cut down on texting without some intervention.

great many adults also are addicted to devices of the new technology. In fact, there's a "Distracted Driving Summit" taking place in Washington, D.C., in which federal officials are urging the public not to text and drive in those states that haven't outlawed it. And a rehab center for the technologically dependent just opened in

state. For $14,000, clients are helped to wean themselves from obsessive use of video games, etc..

8 0
3 years ago
Help please!!!!!!!!!!!
bagirrra123 [75]

1. The character's words and actions.

2. because Buck refused to mush.

3. Convalescence.

I hope this helped you! <3

8 0
3 years ago
Would “we are at the end of the rope , we don’t know what to do” fall under figure of speech
givi [52]
Yes it does fall under a figure of speech
5 0
3 years ago
Need help worth 30 points!
makkiz [27]

I believe it is the second option

Hope this helped!

3 0
3 years ago
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