✡Heya Mate✡
➣So I believe that social media connection is just as valuable as face to face encounters due to the fact that face to face encounters can only happen in a restricted area. For example, friends and family abroad cannot be communicated with if they are on the other side of the world but over social media, voice calls and video calls are accessible which is extremely valuable
➣Meeting people face to face is a great experience but depending on the distance range, for some people, Social media could be more valuable
Gianna❤
Sharks are fish, the other three are mammals.
I'm not entirely sure(I used to have a heifer who liked to eat everything she wasn't supposed to) but I think cows are herbivores while the others are not.
The "killer whale"(which is an Orca, and closer to a large Dolphin than a whale) is the only one that has echolocation.
The rat is the only scavenger on the list.
Probably not helpful, but it's all true.
Answer: pretty sure the answer is marinade
Myrtle and Gatsby have one thing in common: they're both trying to rise above their station. Like Gatsby, Myrtle isn't happy with the class she was born to. She insists that she married beneath her, and she tries to talk about the "lower orders" as though she's not one of them: "I told that boy about the ice." Myrtle raised her eyebrows in despair at the shiftlessness of the lower orders. "These people! You have to keep after them all the time" (2.69).
So, what makes Gatsby and Myrtle different? Gatsby is a tragic hero, while Myrtle, in Fitzgerald's portrait, is a ridiculous fool. Is it that Gatsby strives out of love, while Myrtle does it out of greed? Or is it simply because Gatsby is a man—and Myrtle had the tragedy of being born a woman?
answer: i think it's a complex compound
explanation: i dont know i could be wrong