<span>In "The Bat-Poet," the option that best describes the little brown bat's attempt to write a poem about bats is D. it is more enjoyable because he is able to rely on his own memories and experiences. He is a bat after all, so he lived with them for a long time and knows them and how they behave. Thus it was easier for him to write about them. He also had to find an audience who would listen to his poetry, so he found a chipmunk. </span>
Answer:
Once a boy meet another girl, he was so tired and greedy, so he cut her girl's stomach and steal her lungs heart and blood to store in his box. After he's done, a girl will be safely locked in boy's boxes until a boy finished her.
Answer:
What we can understand about Count Dracula's character from the excerpt is:
C. He is bored of the slow pace of Transylvania and wants a change.
Explanation:
"Dracula" is a horror novel by author Bram Stoker. Count Dracula is the villain. He is a vampire who gains vitality and youth from drinking people's blood.
<u>The excerpt we are analyzing here can be found at the beginning of the story, when the main characters as well as the readers do not yet know who Dracula really is. From the excerpt, we can infer that Dracula is tired of the sameness and the excessive tranquility of Transylvania, where he lives, and he longs for a change. He says he is excited to be among lots of people in a busy city. He wants to move to London so bad that he even learned English on his own.</u>
The book "Wonder" talks about facial difference of a woman which made her child shocked.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Wonder is a youngsters' novel by Raquel Jaramillo, under the pen name of R. J. Palacio, distributed on February 14, 2012. R. J. Palacio composed Wonder after an episode where her child saw a young lady with an extreme facial contrast and began to cry.
Full of heart, full of truth, Wonder is a book about seeing the beauty that's all around us. It's Auggie and the rest of the children who are the real heart of 'Wonder,' and Palacio captures the voices of girls and boys, fifth graders and teenagers, with equal skill."
Little progress was made for more than a century