This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Every day after work Paul took his muddy boots off on the steps of the front porch. Alice would have a fit if the boots made it so far as the welcome mat. He then took off his dusty overalls and threw them into a plastic garbage bag; Alice left a new garbage bag tied to the porch railing for him every morning. On his way in the house, he dropped the garbage bag off at the washing machine and went straight up the stairs to the shower as he was instructed. He would eat dinner with her after he was “presentable,” as Alice had often said.
1. What type of job does Paul do?
doctor
teacher
construction
store clerk
2. Describe Alice
3. What relationship do Paul and Alice have?
Answer:
- Construction worker
- A very tidy person.
- Husband and wife.
Explanation:
- Construction worker, or any profession that requires getting muddy and wear overalls, such as farmer, ditch digger, or miner.
- Alice seems to be someone who insists on having everything clean and tidy, to the point of imposing strict cleaning rules when Paul arrives from work.
- Paul and Alice seem to live together, so they most likely are husband and wife, or maybe mother and son.
Answer:
excerpt from Clinton's autobiography
text from the first inaugural speech
magazine interview
Explanation:
These are all directly from Clinton so they will be primary. The others are other people's opinions so they will be secondary.
The first sentence is correct and the second sentence is a fragment.
2.cold command 3.hoarse. I believe that is the order of the questions the numbering was a little confusing.
At the beginning of the poem, he says why he does not love her. He doesn't love her as if she was a salt-rose, topaz, or carnation, but he loves her as if she was a plant that does not bloom. This means that he does not love her superficially, but he loves her deeply for who she is on the inside.
Flowers are beautiful things that everyone admires, but no one would admire a flower that doesn’t bloom because they could not see the beauty that it contains.