This one is really hard especially since it's a baby omg! i.d.k? I would let my child cry cause i.d.k these people.
Answer:
No
Explanation:
The correct sentence would be: He <em>wasn't</em><em> </em>looking for trouble, but he found it.
Answer:
The servant came reporting that a grave has been violated, and a shrouded disfigured body found, still alive
Explanation:
The servant says that a grave has been violated , and a shrouded disfigured body has been found and still alive after the search party has gone out to investigate the terrible crimes.
Berenice was written by Edgar Allan Poe, it is a short horror story which was first published in the Southern Literary Messenger in the year 1835. The story is about a man named Egaeus who is preparing to marry Berenice his cousin, Egaeus suffers from a type of obsessive disorder which makes him to always fixate on objects while Berenice also suffers from an unspecified illness.
Berenice health got worsen leaving her teeth( which was cherished by Egaeus) as the only remaining healthy part. Berenice died and is buried, Egaeus wakes up one day feeling uneasy and with the sound of screams in his ears. A servant report to him that the grave of Berenice's has been disturbed, and she is still alive.
Answer:
A. The burden of things
F. The value of things
J. The call for things
Explanation:
According to a different source, these are the options that come with this question:
<em>Type A,B, or C for blank 1</em>
The burden of things
The loss of things
The beauty of things
<em>Type E, F, or G for Blank 2.</em>
The demand of things
The value of things
The absence of things
<em>Type H, I, or J for Blank 3.</em>
The need for things
The passion for things
The call for things
This question refers to the essay "The Tyranny of Things" by Elizabeth Morris. In this essay, Morris argues that possessing and desiring things can be a burden on people. She refers to this burden as a "tyranny," due to the fact that such a need can end up controlling and affecting your whole life. Morris also talks about the value of things, as she urges us to only acquire those things that truly bring value to us. Finally, she discusses the call for things, as well as the urge that people often have to own more than they need, even if this causes them more problems than benefits.