The volcanoes section <span>of the Ready.gov website is </span>there to inform people that volcanoes erupt and when they do, it causes wide-ranged cataclysmic events which are often dangerous to any form of life around its danger zone. This section of the page also informs visitors the course of action which must be done to survive a cataclysmic event. It also describes in detail the signs to look for to determine whether or not the volcanoe/s in observation is/are in danger of erupting. Also, visiting this section will make you think wether or not you should consider living in a volcanoe-surrounded area.
In the future days, which we seek to make secure, we look forward to a world founded upon four essential human freedoms. The first is freedom of speech and expression everywhere in the world. The second is freedom of every person to worship God in his own way everywhere in the world. The third is freedom from want . . . . The fourth is freedom from fear . . . . Which best explains why Roosevelt evokes the theme of freedom in this excerpt?
Answer:Personification connects readers with the object that is personified. Personification can make descriptions of non-human entities more vivid, or can help readers understand, sympathize with, or react emotionally to non-human characters.
Explanation:
Thanks for posting. I hadn't thought of it before.
The quick answer to this is that they gather leaves to make boats. As a science major, I'm a little doubtful this would work. Those ants covered acres and acres and their size though relatively small, were huge compared to other ants. The surface tension of water with a leaf might be enough to accommodate 20 ants, but that was a spit in the bucket.
Further, this implies that the ants were discriminating enough to stop eating the vegetation (which is the central conflict of the story) and decide that they had to forestall their appetite so they had leaves to cross. Even if they were capable of such higher lever mental abilities, there likely were not enough leaves around to accomplish the crossing.
All of that just so I could answer A
Jack wants to enforce them with violence. He likes that sort of thing. The rules, of course, do not apply to him.