1. To teach a lesson, <span>Aesop used the fable "The Fox and the Crow."
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2. Sitting in a tree with a piece of cheese in her beak <span><span>is a crow</span>.
3. </span><span>Nearby, a fox spies on the crow.
4. The crow is the fox's plan </span><span>to trick.
5. His goal is to get her cheese. (gerund)
There is no gerund in this sentence.
6. To distract the crow's attention, t</span><span><span>he fox flatters her.
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7. </span><span>Slyly, he asks her to sing just one song.
8. </span><span>Opening her mouth to sing, the crow drops the cheese.
9. The fox snaps up the cheese in a flash.
10. </span><span><span>To end the fable, </span>Aesop adds a moral.</span>
Answer: A
Explanation: I did the diagnostic
Answer: Cool, Funny, Nice
Explanation:
Sounds like the Arabian Nights, said Mrs. White, as she rose and began to set the supper. Don't you think you might wish for four pairs of hands for me
Her husband drew the talisman from his pocket, and all three burst into laughter as the Sergeant-Major, with a look of alarm on his face, caught him by the arm
Sir Thomas More wrote Utopia<span> in 1516. The work was written in Latin and it was published in Louvain (present-day Belgium). </span>Utopia<span> is a work of satire, indirectly criticizing Europe's political corruption and religious hypocrisy. </span>More<span> was a Catholic Humanist.</span>