Answer:Writing is a personal process and there is not just one way to do it.
Explanation: In the first chapter of On Writing Well, the writer William Zinsser recalls being invited to a school in Connecticut to speak about writing as a vocation. Mr. Brock, a surgeon who had started writing as a hobby, was there to speak about writing as an avocation. This allowed the students to have access to different perspectives on writing and to understand that there is not just one right way to write.
Answer:
One day I was in the kitchen, getting coffee like every day. I turn around and I see my friend! He says "I just met your sister." you freak out and check everywhere for a "sister" but there is nobody to be seen. When I check back my friend is gone. I find him outside playing baseball. He does that everyday for 2 weeks. You think to yourself "This has gone on too long!" and the next day you wait for him and you find a little girl. This little girl is lost! You help her find the way home, and you live a happy life.
Explanation:
Answer:
A. Three tragedies and one comedy
Explanation:
I'll be honest here, I did not know the answer off the top of my head!
So, I consulted randolphcollege.edu and found this:
"Twenty-five hundred years ago, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripedes, and Aristophanes wrote their plays in verse for an annual five- or six-day spring festival of dramatic competition called the Great (or City) Dionysia and dedicated to Dionysus. Three tragedians competed at the festival, each presenting three tragedies and a satyr play* (a tetralogy) over the course of a day; five comedians each presented one play on the last day of the festival.
*comedy
Answer: D.In honor of the town near its discovery
Explanation:
The Rosetta Stone is a stone which was discovered in 1799, in a small Egyptian village of el-Rashid, known as Rosetta. This is how the stone got its name. The stone is about 44 inches tall and 30 inches wide, while it is believed that it dates back to 196 BC. As of 1802, it can be seen in the British Museum in London.