Answer:
no conclusion answers the topic question in different words.
A main idea does not show what readers will learn.
The word set that completes the given analogy above is, kitten : cat. The given word set is fawn : deer. Fawn is a baby deer. The pattern of the analogy is baby is to adult. The only word set that has the same pattern is kitten is to cat. Therefore, kitten :cat is the correct answer.
Answer:
Short answer, No.
Explanation:
Quarter 1 + Quarter 2= Semester 1 grade
Quarter 3 + Quarter 4= Semester 2 grade
Semester 1 and Semester 2 grades are totally different things. If you are in High school, or are in advanced track middle school class, than Semester 1 and 2 grades go onto your high school transcript that colleges see.Overall grade just refers to how you are doing in a class at a certain point of time.
Let's look at Edge for a second. Overall grade is "the grade on the work you have submitted. No penalty for any missing or overdue assignments".
Think of this in the way you would for colleges or uni; Semester one is your "first final", Semester two is the "second final". Grades to not carry over from Semester 1 to two. They are completely and utterly unrelated.
I hope this helped, although my explanation may be a little confusing. I hope you understand better.
Answer:
Prompt: The Crucible, Act 1, Part 1
The Crucible starts in the place of Reverend Samuel Parris, whose little girl, betty, lies oblivious in bed higher up. Before the kickoff of the play, Parris found Betty, his niece Abigail, and Tituba, his dark slave from Barbados, moving in the woodland outside of Salem at midnight. After Parris emerged from the shrubberies, Betty blacked out and has stayed in a trance from that point forward. The town doctor, Doctor Griggs, who has not had the option to decide why Betty is sick, recommends black magic as a potential reason.
I cannot relate with the reading (and hope that I never have to relate with) but even though the story takes place in the seventeenth century, it portrays an example of conduct we find in hysterias today—to be specific, the potential for dread to become craziness and end in misfortune.