Can you provide the possible answers?
i hope this is ok, idk what grade you're in so maybe make it sound more or less like what's expected of you. you can name the place and the bird what you like, it's left on a cliffhanger so add more if you like
My name is [your name], and I'm [your age]. Now, most people my age don't believe in magic, but even the most skeptical scientists would be made to believe if they saw what i saw. It started on a rainy day in the autumn, a month into the new school year. I was on my usual walk to school, whistling a tune I heard on TV and fidgeting absentmindedly with my backpack straps when I saw up ahead a small shimmering object on the ground. I happen to collect small trinkets and the like, so I jogged over to the light and bent down to look. A small, golden pendant with a silvery feather inside. 'Someone must be devastated to have lost this,' I thought, 'It's so pretty. Perhaps I should turn it in.' I reached out to pick it up, and that's the last thing I remember before I woke up covered in sand. I spat. "What happened?" I pondered aloud. "I'm supposed to be at school." I looked at my watch. 1pm. "I'm gonna be in so much trouble," I groaned, until the fact settled in that I had a bigger problem on my hands. I got up and looked around. "Where am I?" It was a stunning tropical island, and hot enough that I had to take off my jacket... in the fall. The sand was so golden it practically sparkled and the water was cool and blue. I looked up to see a colorful bird flying my direction. As it got closer I started to panic- what if it bites? Is it poisonous? Can birds be poisonous? But it landed on a coconut on the ground in front of me- a rainbow macaw, as I could now see it to be- and spoke. "Hey! Squack! I'm [parrot name], and this island is called [island name]. Welcome to your new vacation home!"
Answer:
Explanation:
Organisms that are sensitive to changes in temperature would die.
Answer:
A. It is peacefully exploring a nearby field.
Explanation:
In the story <em>Shooting an Elephant</em>, George Orwell describes the encounter of the narrator with the elephant:
"The elephant was standing eight yards from the road, his left side towards us. He took not the slightest notice of the crowd's approach. He was tearing up bunches of grass, beating them against his knees to clean them and stuffing them into his mouth."
"...And at that distance, peacefully eating, the elephant looked no more dangerous than a cow."
This excerpt makes A the best answer to the question.
Answer:
I think its the first one "In life, we must make choices that both broaden and limit our experience."
Explanation: