Hello!
Answer:
It really depends on what the rules are. For example, if they are rules in your parent's house, then it's to teach you responsibility and what to do and what not to do. If it's for class rules, it would be partly to make the students feel safe as well as to show respect. But rules, in general, teach us responsibility and safety.
It was saturday morning, just after dawn, when I took the bus to a library in Fairfield. After I had finished up with some reading, I went back to the bus stop which was deserted. It was like a ghost town. All of a sudden, a small cry behind the seat in the bus stop, broke the dead silence around me. I opened it, I was astonished, a small baby pokes its little hand out, grasping for air. Beside it was a blanket and some diapers. I immediately called the police and the welfare department. I felt sad, how could a mother abandon their baby like that. Once the welfare department and police arrived, I gave them the baby and the box. Every night, every day since then I prayed and hoped the baby would find a safe home. And a few days later, I received a call from the police saying they found a safe home for the baby. They praised me, saying that if I hadn’t found the baby, it would have been dead. Since then, I always do acts of kindness for other people.
It’s 187 so u gotta shorten it
Answer:
i dont really know but heres some info
Explanation:
Harriet’s desire for justice became apparent at age 12 when she spotted an overseer about to throw a heavy weight at a fugitive. Harriet stepped between the enslaved person and the overseer—the weight struck her head.
She later said about the incident, “The weight broke my skull … They carried me to the house all bleeding and fainting. I had no bed, no place to lie down on at all, and they laid me on the seat of the loom, and I stayed there all day and the next.”
Harriet’s good deed left her with headaches and narcolepsy the rest of her life, causing her to fall into a deep sleep at random. She also started having vivid dreams and hallucinations which she often claimed were religious visions (she was a staunch Christian). Her infirmity made her unattractive to potential slave buyers and renters.
Harriet Tubman. National Women’s History Museum.
Harriet Tubman: The Moses of Her People. Harriet Tubman Historical Society.
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I think the answer would be c. i'm not sure tho.
A. The pain in his appendix because in the first sentence he talks about the pain in his side.