A linking verb is a verb that describes the subject by connecting it to a predicate adjective or predicate noun
Explanation:
Please check the campaign of the disease control center promoting influenza (flu) vaccination. Analyze your campaign to discover your target audience and the advertising technology you use. Next, I will evaluate the effectiveness of these advertising technologies. Write a five-part article explaining how the advertising campaign effectively promotes a broad spectrum of influenza vaccinations
Target audience - who the ad is targeting. This is the focus of any advertising campaign, as a thorough investigation of the target audience will enable the creation of content that effectively promotes your item. The closer you are to the target audience, the better the results will be. Otherwise, advertising costs will be wasted as the effect is minimal or nonexistent.
Please check the campaign of the disease control center promoting influenza (flu) vaccination. Analyze your campaign to discover your target audience and the advertising technology you use. Next, I will evaluate the effectiveness of these advertising technologies. Write a five-part article explaining how the advertising campaign effectively promotes a broad spectrum of influenza vaccinations
Please check the campaign of the disease control center promoting influenza (flu) vaccination. Analyze your campaign to discover your target audience and the advertising technology you use
Effective ads start with the same basic components as other IMC campaigns. Identify target audience and campaign goals. If the advertisement is part of a broader IMC effort, it is important to consider the strategic role of the advertisement on other marketing communication tools. By clarifying the target audience, activity strategy, budget, the next step is to develop a creative strategy to develop convincing advertisements. Creative strategy has two elements: message and appeal.
According to CDC (Disease Control and Prevention Center), influenza (flu) is an infectious respiratory disease caused by influenza virus infecting the nose, throat, sometimes the lungs. Influenza A and B viruses are the two main types of human infections. Influenza virus is active throughout the year, but in the US, the influenza season starts from around October and lasts until April with peaks peak in December and February. With this in mind, somewhere in September and October, we need to start thinking about ways to protect our children from the flu. This is particularly true for parents of young children who are at high risk of developing influenza complications. With appropriate precautions and cautious treatment, the disease may be mild.
Answer: a. He is distraught and unsure.
In this excerpt, Hamlet is distraught and feels desperate. He begins to wonder whether it would be better to die, as dying is only to sleep forever. He thinks this would end his heartache, and all the pain he is subject to. However, as he continues talking, he wonders if maybe the sleep of death comes with dreams, and whether those dreams might be nightmares. This worries him, and makes him more unsure as to what choice to make.
Answer:In Chapter 11, Jem and Scout decide to head to town to spend some of Jem's birthday money. As they pass Mrs. Dubose's house on their way to town, she begins verbally attacking Jem and Scout in her typical manner. After accusing both children of playing hooky on a Saturday, she wrongly blames Jem for breaking down Maudie's scuppernong arbor earlier in the morning. Mrs. Dubose then directs her attention toward Scout by telling her that she'll be waiting tables at the O.K. Cafe if she doesn't change her ways. (Lee 135) Her next comment hits home and makes Jem stiffen when she says, "Not only a Finch waiting on tables but one in the courthouse lawing for n******!" (Lee 135)
Following the hateful comment by Mrs. Dubose, Jem's demeanor changes. He turns "scarlet red," becomes silent, and displays no expression of happiness when purchasing his toy steam engine in town. On the walk back, Jem takes Scout's new baton and begins to smash Mrs. Dubose's camellia bush. After destroying the camellia bush, he snaps Scout's baton over his knee in a fit of rage. Scout's explanation for Jem's reaction is that "he simply went mad." (Lee 136)
Jem had long endured the negative comments and personal attacks from Mrs. Dubose until she verbally attacked his father. Jem looked up to his father more than anyone in his life, and that insult stung Jem deeply. When Atticus found out about Jem's rampage he made Jem apologize to Mrs. Dubose who requested that Jem read to her as his punishment.
Explanation: