Answer:
When she was taken away by the socs
Explanation:
she doesnt really come out.
The statements that serve as evidence that supports the theme of "The Story of the Fisherman” are...
A. “I conjure you on your honour to tell me if you really were in that vase?”
B. “How could your whole body go in? I cannot believe it unless I see you do the thing.”
E. “‘No,’ answered the fisherman, ‘if I trust myself to you I am afraid you will treat me as a certain Greek king treated the physician Douban.’”
Conversation to Paragraph writting:
The customer walked into a shop. The shopkeeper asked him <u>how can he help him.</u> The customer told him <u>that he want a pair of shoes.</u> The shopkeeper asked <u>what kind of shoes he is </u><u>looking</u><u> for.</u> The customer replied <u>he want something in formal wear.</u> The shopkeeper asked <u>customer to tell him the colour of shoes</u>. The customer said <u>black would be better.</u> To this the shopkeeper showed him a pair and said that the pair would suit his personality.

Answer:
The hoax is the Mystery of the Bathtub
Explanation:
- The bathtub hoax was a famous hoax perpetrated by the American journalist H. L. Mencken involving the publication of a fictitious history of the bathtub.
- The article claimed that the bathtub had been invented by Lord John Russell of England in 1828, and that Cincinnatian Adam Thompson became acquainted with it during business trips there in the 1830s.
- Mencken grew concerned of people taking his article seriously, comparing it in acceptance to the Norman conquest.
- The article was entirely false but was still being widely quoted as fact for years, even as recently as January 2008 when a Kia TV ad referenced the story with no mention of its fictional nature.