1.A community is important because being in a community sometimes make us feel like we belong.
2.Being part of a community makes “me” feel grateful because I love being a part of something.
3.A community can be seen as different ways but it’s usually a group of people of just people that are now nice and helpful.
4. It is a good time to call on your community when you need help or feel lonely or are in danger
Hope this helped
I believe if I remember correctly, he/she is watching soldiers cross a waterway or bridge.
I would say B
A focus group could be defined as a group of interacting individuals having some common interest or characteristics, brought together by a moderator, who uses the group and its interaction as a way to gain information about a specific or focused issue.
1.The correct answer is A, because she disagrees with the human laws which say that her brother doesn't deserve a proper burial because he is considered to have been a traitor, whereas the divine laws don't see such things the same way.2.There are a few themes there. First theme is between a person and the society. Antigone wants to bury him even though the representative of the society, which is the King, forbade it. She does it anyway and shows how an individual fought the system which she believed was wrong and corrupt.
Another theme is the divine law versus common law. Creon represents society and the law of the people while she was burying Polyneices according to Greek tradition based on their religious beliefs. She sticks to divine law over local law because she believes that Creon is wrong 3. There is no question that pride, in the context of Antigone (and most of Sophocles' works), is a trait despised by the gods and punished without mercy. In Antigone, Sophocles describes the type of pride that allows men to create laws that substitute for divine principles. In other words, when Creon creates a law because he believes it is divine will, that is the ultimate display of punishable pride, for no man can ever create a law that is equal to or above divine right. As a result, when Tiresias comes with the news that Creon will suffer, Creon realizes that he has made a terrible mistake, and yet still refuses to admit it, bending to the prophet's message only because he wants to preserve his life, not because he knows he's gone too far. As a result, he must suffer the loss of his family.