How I gonna give 5 facts when I don’t know the scene
Answer:
The answer to number 6 is A. The answers to number 7. A false, B false, C true. The answer to number 8 is C. The answer to number 9 is A. The answer for number 10 is A (I THINK). The answer for number 11 is A. The answer for number 12 is B. The answer of number 13 is B. The answer for number 14 is B. The answer for number 15 is B.
Explanation:
The subject is always a person or place. You could Join two independent clauses with a semicolon and join two independent clauses with a comma and coordinating conjunction. The predicate tells something about the subject.
Answer:
3. Nose → 1. Pharynx → 4. Trachea → 2. Bronchi → 5. Alveoli
Explanation:
In the respiratory system, the primary function is to obtain oxygen and eliminate carbon dioxide. The oxygen taken in are needed by the cells for proper body functioning and the carbon dioxide produced by the body cell is eliminated.
The respiratory system is made up of respiratory airways through which air passes. It leads in and out of the lungs.
The flow of air in the body begins from the nose. We breath in through the nose and the air moves to the pharynx, a passage that leads to the lungs. Food also passes through the pharynx. Then the air passes from the pharynx to the trachea. The bronchi connects to the trachea from the bottom of the trachea and it branches into secondary and tertiary bronchi. Then the air is taken in by the alveoli (tiny sacs) into the body where it is used.
She set the time and place of duncans murder, claims that she would kill a baby at her breast to honor a vow.
Satan is by far the most ambiguous character in "Paradise Lost". As a paragon of evil, pride, rebellion, and disdain, he is an anti-hero because he acts in juxtaposition to God, who is the hero and the only real, commanding authority in the world of this epic. Without God, this epic would lack the moral balance that it relies so heavily upon. But without Satan, it would lack both charm and soul.
There is much more to Satan than meets the eye. His real strength and appeal lay in the fact that we, the readers, are prone to sympathize with him, more than we would be willing to admit. In all of his wickedness, he asks all the most pertinent religious questions that we ourselves are so fond of asking: who is this despotic God and why should we obey him when he has made such a cruel world for us? The reader can't help but be enchanted by Satan's sophisticated thinking and profound speeches. Even though we feel that his arguments are flawed because they are self-centered, we are inclined to agree with them. Milton's God, as the hero, is a pure principle of authority, will, and goodness. He doesn't want to seduce us to accept his ways. He wants us to freely choose to follow them, without resorting to tricks and sophisms. However, we can't help but feel that Satan knows us better!
Satan's courage to oppose the almighty God is a trait that nobody can disregard or disrespect. At the same time, it is his most terrifying trait, as it is the very reason for his banishment from heaven and, consequently, our own. It is Satan's animal (the snake, as his extended arm) that inspired disobedience with Eve and Adam. It is Satan's charm that will condemn to hell all those who fail to resist it.