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AlekseyPX
3 years ago
10

The part of speech helps determine

English
1 answer:
kicyunya [14]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

B

Explanation:

it tells what word works it in

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Discuss the following question. Would you recommend living in a city or living in the desert?
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Answer:in the city

Explanation: because i grew up in the city so i'm kinda biased

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Rewrite the sentences and add the adverbials.
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Write. Use the word above : Rhythm, festival, tap, symbals, wings, sparkling, excited
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3 years ago
A persuasive essay on why we should use cellphone in classroom today 500 word minimum
Stells [14]

Although there are those who insist on resisting it, technology is a part of our lives for good. There is no escaping it. Our cars, houses, jobs and even friendships depend on it more than they ever have. It is our primary source of information and number one research tool, all that thanks to the internet.

As it usually happens to anything that rapidly develops and becomes essential, technology is vilified. It is accused of bringing harmful content into the houses of honest families, disrupting their children's behavior and upbringing. It is also accused by some of our older masters to be the assassin of education, since it makes students jobs a lot easier than they would be without it.

What those people may be failing to see and acknowledge is the fact that those harms do not originate nor depend solely on technology - or the internet, if we choose to be more specific. They have always been and will always be a part of life. Bad influences may be found - especially if one is looking for them intently - everywhere. Also, by attacking and forbidding the use of technology, parents and teachers are preventing an inevitable sort of growth.

As stated above, there is no escaping technology. Therefore, trying to prevent and control its use might not be beneficial to kids and teenagers since they will be working with technology or depending on it to do their jobs in the future. When it comes to the use of cellphones, teachers might initially think of it as a negative factor in classroom, but that is all up to how, when and why they allow it to be used. Cellphones may become an asset to the teaching-learning process when included as a powerful tool in order to enhance it. Real-time researching, challenges and posting can and should become a part of any attractive class. Not only will students be doing what they do best, but they will associate such task with knowledge and self-development.

It should be taken into consideration, however, that not every single lesson will allow for the use of cellphones such as exemplified above. What should be done then? Should cellphones be forbidden when they seem to have no use for teachers' purposes?

That idea may be tempting and sometimes put into practice. Why not reach an agreement with learners on a cellphone-free-lesson? Students themselves may find it cleansing and liberating in a way. But let's not fool ourselves, that will probably not work frequently. Since most of communication is done nowadays via smartphones, it would be the same as asking them not to utter a single word for hours.

Rules, nonetheless, may be applied. And students can help with their conception. Maybe a rule could state that students should not use their phones for an extended period of time or that they shouldn't distract fellow students from listening to what is being taught. Those may sound too simplistic, but appealing to empathy and self-awareness may be a good start. When students understand how their excessive use of a cellphone may be harmful to their own learning and to that of others, they are likely to tone it down a bit.

In conclusion, the solution is as simple as the saying goes: if you cannot beat them, join them. Since there is no beating technology and its omnipresence in our daily lives, the best option is to accept it for what it really is: a consequence of our own minds, the product of development, of new needs and times. If we can learn to adapt it - or ourselves to it - with the purpose of making it work for us, our knowledge and growth, technology will be the greatest and most faithful ally we can have.

3 0
3 years ago
How do the authors use word choice and structure to support and develop the central idea in the two passages? Both authors use r
ololo11 [35]

Passages:  

1. Read the passage from A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen. [Nora:] I have not been able to put aside much from my housekeeping money, for Torvald must have a good table. I couldn't let my children be shabbily dressed; I have felt obliged to use up all he gave me for them, the sweet little darlings! Mrs. Linde: So it has all had to come out of your own necessaries of life, poor Nora? Nora: Of course. Besides, I was the one responsible for it. Whenever Torvald has given me money for new dresses and such things, I have never spent more than half of it; I have always bought the simplest and cheapest things. Thank Heaven, any clothes look well on me, and so Torvald has never noticed it. But it was often very hard on me, Christine—because it is delightful to be really well dressed, isn't it? Mrs. Linde: Quite so. Nora: Well, then I have found other ways of earning money. Last winter I was lucky enough to get a lot of copying to do; so I locked myself up and sat writing every evening until quite late at night. Many a time I was desperately tired; but all the same it was a tremendous pleasure to sit there working and earning money. It was like being a man.

2.Read the passage from A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf. But for women, I thought, looking at the empty shelves, these difficulties were infinitely more formidable. In the first place, to have a room of her own, let alone a quiet room or a sound-proof room, was out of the question, unless her parents were exceptionally rich or very noble, even up to the beginning of the nineteenth century. Since her pin money, which depended on the goodwill of her father, was only enough to keep her clothed, she was debarred from such alleviations as came even to Keats or Tennyson or Carlyle, all poor men, from a walking tour, a little journey to France, from the separate lodging which, even if it were miserable enough, sheltered them from the claims and tyrannies of their families.

Answer: Ibsen uses a problem-solution structure, while Woolf uses a cause-effect structure.

Explanation:

Both Ibsen and Woolf are describing a statement of a woman where she is wanting to have money for her and to sit in a quiet room, room of her own where she will be feeling peaceful.

Problem-solution Henrik Ibsen is describing one situation in this passage where the woman is giving everything for the children and she feels good about it but on the other side she is like every other woman and she wants to have pretty clothes and her peace so she is finding a solution at the end of the passage which is a job that she was doing late at night.

Cause-effect Virginia Woolf is describing in this passage what is good for one woman to have and what is the current situation that she can see. In the cause and effect structure, there is something that is making the other things happen. Woolf is describing the difficulties that women were experienced because of the current situation in the world.

5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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