<span>Wolves are social creatures.
It is easier to hunt with more pack members
To help fight off any scavengers for when they do kill.
Hope this helps!</span>
It's pretty simple actually. If everyone lost sense of balance I'm pretty sure there would be no life because in order to reproduce you need balance. I hope this helps
The answer is C. or.
I can't really explain it good ,but I know for a fact it's C.or, plus it can connect back to the word either.
Unlike Atticus and Calpurnia, Harper Lee does not give us a paragraph describing Jem. Instead we must learn about his character through his actions and speech. Sometimes Scout will use a descriptive sentence for her brother's character but mostly the reader learns about him as the story progresses. Many of Jem's statements in the first chapter are written in the imperative mood. For example, he says, "Don't blame me when he gouges your eyes out." By using the imperative mood, Harper Lee shows Jem to be older and seemingly the leader of Dill and Scout. The use of the indicative mood in Jem's dialogue also shows his stubbornness as a leader. When Dill is pressuring him into touching the house of Boo Radley, Jem says, "I'm going...don't hurry me." Even though Jem is worried about what may happen when he touches the house, he stays in control of the situation by using both the indicative and imperative mood in this sentence. Jem is also seen as the protector of Scout. When Jem is hesitant about making Boo Radley come out of the house because he fears for his life, Scout notes, "Besides, Jem had his little sister to think of." It is clear from this sentence, that Jem looks out for Scout which shows that he is a protective, responsible older brother.
Answer:
C The sight motivates him to go out and rid the earth of evil.
Explanation:
Fortune favors us, dear Sancho," said Don Quixote, gesturing toward the plain. "She
has deemed us worthy to battle and slay these thirty-no, these forty--monstrous giants.
Sweeping so evil a breed from the face of the earth is a righteous service."
How does seeing the windmills affect Don Quixote's journey?
А He decides the windmills are a sign that he should find and destroy forty giants.