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ira [324]
3 years ago
5

why do you think fans would like to know who's their favorite instagram stars are hanging out with or eating dinner with?​

English
2 answers:
weeeeeb [17]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Because people want to know everything about that person and they also dont know the definition of privacy.

Explanation:

and thats on periodt

guapka [62]3 years ago
4 0

Answer: I think it's because they get so addicted to their lives that they wanna be apart of everything that happens and want to know everything

Explanation:

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Historical fiction takes a reader to another time and place and, as accurately as possible, reflects the language, traditions, b
bija089 [108]

We can see here that here is a guide to help you write a story based on actual people or events selecting a period from history:

  • You can select the period of the American Civil war.
  • Research on this time period and understand the events that took.
  • You can pick a character that is related to one prominent person during the American Civil war.
  • Make sure your story follows this order: Exposition, rising action, climax, falling action and resolution.

<h3>What is a story?</h3>

A story is known to be an event that occurred in an imaginary setting or in a true life setting which is written down or narrated orally. Story is usually known to be filled with lessons and instructions for the readers.

We see here that the above guide will help one to write a story that is based on actual events or people.

Learn more about story on brainly.com/question/29033237

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5 0
2 years ago
write the 4 words below in alphabetical order charge chalkchurch chop chop stick cherry alphabetic order ​
aev [14]

Answer: (pls give brainliest cuz the way you said that was mad confusing lol)

chalk, charge, cherry, chop, chopstick, church

Explanation:

I think you're asking for:

charge

chalk

church

chop

chopstick

cherry

I alphabetical order, that's

chalk

charge

cherry

chop

chopstick

church

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Write about who am I
Step2247 [10]

Answer:

A PERSON

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Based on what you know about 'The Setting Sun &amp; The Rolling World', and 'The Winter Hibiscus', what is an important question
balandron [24]

Answer:

ima just take all your points and roll out tbh

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
What argument is Gandhi making in this excerpt? How does he construct and support this argument? Font Sizes
horrorfan [7]
Gandhi's trial for sedition, and the subsequent imprisonment that began in March 1922 and ended with his release in January of 1924, marked the first time that he had faced prosecution in India. The judge, C.N. Broomfield, was uncertain what to do with his famous prisoner–Gandhi was clearly guilty as charged, and willingly admitted as much, even going so far as to ask for the heaviest possible sentence. Like many Englishmen, Broomfield developed a liking for the Mahatma, commenting, "even those who differ from you in politics look upon you as a man of high ideals and of noble and even saintly life." He gave Gandhi the lightest sentence possible: six years in prison, which would be later reduced to just two years.

Willingness to accept imprisonment was, of course, an integral part of satyagraha, and Gandhi was perfectly content while in prison. His captors allowed him a spinning wheel and reading material, and save for a bout of appendicitis (which actually hastened his release), he was, he wrote to a friend, "happy as a bird."

Still, it must be noted that during his two-year imprisonment, Gandhi's great nonviolent revolution essentially fell apart. Non-cooperation gradually died away as Indians drifted back to their jobs and routines; the Congress leaders, notably Motilal Nehru and C.R. Das, were participating in local government again; worst of all, Hindu-Muslim unity had fallen apart, and violence rocked many communities. The struggle for Indian independence had run aground on the immense, seemingly insuperable problem of disunity among Indians, who had never been a nation in the Western sense, and remained divided by caste, language, and most of all, religion.

Gandhi's greatest achievement, throughout the '20s, '30s and '40s, was to overcome these differences, to unify India by making himself the symbol of unity. Of course, he never explicitly claimed this role–to do so would have been anathema to his selfless philosophy–yet it was undeniably Gandhi's person, more than the slogans of nationalism and liberation, that united Brahmins and untouchables, Hindus and Muslims in the struggle against the British. His amazing personal determination served as a beacon to all–his behavior after leaving prison is a perfect example: no sooner had he left the trying conditions of prison than he immediately commended a three-week fast requesting peace between the warring religious factions, an event that captured the imagination of the world and indeed went a long way toward easing tensions between Hindus and Muslims. His "soul-force" may well have been the only thing that could bring all Indians together, and he used it to amazing effect.

Even as Gandhi served to unify the Indian people, his figure served to expose the contradictions within the British position on the subcontinent. For while the members of Gandhi's home-rule movement strengthened their arguments by pointing to the oppression of the British Viceroys, those Viceroys attempting to quell the Gandhi phenomenon in fact failed because of a policy not oppressive enough. Theirs was a liberal empire in the end, and they were raised in a liberal tradition that prized freedom of speech, of the press, and of assembly; thus they could not counter satyagraha and stay true to themselves. Had Gandhi practiced satyagraha in, say, Stalin's Soviet Union or Hitler's Germany–or had the British been willing to violate their own liberal principles and imprison him for life, deport him, or even execute him–the struggle for independence might have taken a dramatically different turn. But then, such a crackdown was never a realistic possibility. Indeed, most of his British antagonists genuinely liked Gandhi, and by the 1920s, weary of war and empire, most of them had reconciled themselves to some sort of home rule for India in the near future. Independence was coming, in one shape or another, despite the resistance of die-hard imperialists in Britain, because the British had lost the will to sustain their empire; and yet the Viceroys, governors and Secretaries of State were still not willing to give India total independence.

8 0
3 years ago
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