Answer:
Muir views nature as a place of freedom, exploration, and adventure.
He describes his first botanizing excursion as a moment of "glorious freedom" in which he can explore its beauty. His use of words reflect that feeling even when he´s talking about the hardships of the experience:
Explanation:
The description of the difficulty when fording streams and wading swamps reflects a sense of adventure more than one of despair.
Then, there´s a bad situation, which is indicated by words such as "bewildering" and "discouraging," but then he describes the Calypso found on a stream, usually a nice location, and phrases such as "bed of yellow mosses," "small white bulb," and "soft nest" all represent a nice situation.
Answer:
While single-mother families are more than five times as likely to experience poverty as married-parent families, single fathers and cohabiting parents are also more likely to live in poverty
Explanation:
many times in literature, the author only mentions one parent so that the reader has to use context clues to infer what happened to the parent
Ummmm just tell her that ur discovering who you are as a person K guess I don’t know. XD and this is gross ngl lol
I think they do because you get to argue rightfully about your own belief whether your “opponent” wants to believe yours is more right/better.