Which sentence most needs to be revised because its description is too vague?
We hiked two miles uphill in the blooming forest today.We sprinted back and forth in the stuffy high school gym.We had to walk up several flights of stairs to get there.<span>We stretched and then slowly jogged once around the track.</span>
Answer:
Reggie pushes aside doubts and insecurities and goes to Anne’s house to confess his feelings.
Explanation:
In <em>Mr. and Mrs. Dove</em> by Katherine Mansfield, the story is told about Reggie's insecurity and inability to ask Anne's parents for the hand of their daughter Anne in marriage. Anne laughs at him continually which further makes things worse for him.
Eventually, Reggie pushes his doubts and insecurities to go to Anne's house to confess his feelings.
Answer: in sentence 3, the underlined phrase "the students" is an indirect object.
Explanation: an indirect object is a noun phrase referring to someone or something that is affected by the action of a transitive verb (typically as a recipient), but is not the primary object. In the first sentence, the underlined phrase is "the subjects" which is the direct object, in the second sentence the underlined phrase is "the notes" which is also the direct object, and in the third sentence the underlined phrase "the students" is an indirect object (because it represents a recipient).
Based on Kolhberg's theory and stages, Hanna's ideas show she is on the conventional stage.
<h3>What are the stages in Kolhberg's theory?</h3>
- Pre-conventional: Social rules are followed only because if not there is a negative consequence.
- Conventional: Authorities and social rules are accepted without questioning them.
- Post-conventional: Ethical principles are used to judge whether an action is good or bad.
<h3>What stage is Hannah in?</h3>
Hanna is in the conventional stage because she has already accepted authorities and social rules but she does not question the law.
Learn more about psycology in: brainly.com/question/17447376
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I think it is D. I think that it once had a religious meaning , but even though times had changed and God was no longer part of the church. —- it remained the same