Spamming
taking people's information from the internet
hacking
downloading windows 10
taking people's names
Answer:
Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper." Identify a theme of the story and explore how characterization and setting develop that theme. One paragraph will be about character and the other paragraph will be about setting, but both paragraphs must be about the same theme. Your story should include the following elements: Two paragraphs, each about a different detail (character or setting) that shows the theme Objective summaries that emphasize details related to each paragraph topic Clear, formal, academic language that shows your professionalism You should have completed a draft of this assignment in the activity before this one. If you haven't done so, go back and complete that activity now.
Answer: A. his end goal was “to rip a reader's nerves to rags.”
Answer:
b)during spring in order to fix the wall
Explanation:
THe poem Mending Wall, we hear the point of view of one of the propietaries of a large land that grows apple trees and how he has a wall that separates his land fmor that of his neighbor, and he thinks that it is not necessary because he doesn´t have animals, and neither does his neighbor, and the trees that they grow wouldn´t affect the other, but his neighbor wants the wall and says that walls make good neighbors, so they meet every spring after the snow is gone, to repair the wall:
<em>"But at spring mending-time we find them there.</em>
<em>I let my neighbor know beyond the hill;</em>
<em>And on a day we meet to walk the line"</em>
They meet every spring to check the wall and see the repairs needed.
<span>A stone wall separates the speaker’s property from his neighbor’s. In spring, the two meet to walk the wall and jointly make repairs. The speaker sees no reason for the wall to be kept—there are no cows to be contained, just apple and pine trees. He does not believe in walls for the sake of walls. The neighbor resorts to an old adage: “Good fences make good neighbors.” The speaker remains unconvinced and mischievously presses the neighbor to look beyond the old-fashioned folly of such reasoning. His neighbor will not be swayed. The speaker envisions his neighbor as a holdover from a justifiably outmoded era, a living example of a dark-age mentality. But the neighbor simply repeats the adage.</span>