1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
tatuchka [14]
3 years ago
7

It's i've always been intersted in plants and trees , but i'm not keen ...... insects ..

English
1 answer:
alexdok [17]3 years ago
3 0

I'd say the most likely answer would be A) on

You might be interested in
Write a letter to the editor about the drinking water promblem in your society​
Arlecino [84]

Answer:

We all need clean water. Some countries all over the world have to drink dirty, impure water this is unhygienic and unhealthy and I think that everyone has the right to drinking good, healthy water.

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
Using analogies should be limited to which of the following styles of writing
sergeinik [125]
D - They can be used in any style of writing
7 0
4 years ago
Great Expectations is a novel in which many people and situations are not what they initially appear to be. What are these insta
VashaNatasha [74]

Answer:

<em>Great Expectations</em> occupied a fairly recently established sub-genre, autobiographical fiction, but it also incorporated other generic possibilities, in particular those of Gothic fiction and popular melodrama. For example, when the convict first comes into Pip's view, he is like an emanation from the graves in the churchyard. He is marked all over his body by the landscape and he tells the boy he wishes he were a frog or an eel. He finally limps off towards the black and deathly gibbet on the river's edge, which had once held a pirate, looking as if he were that pirate ‘come to life, and come down, and going back to hook himself up again’ (p.7). The word ‘grotesque’ can be used to describe the surprising mixture of forms, characteristic of Dickens's writing, in which human, animal and vegetable seem to intermingle, but which is nonetheless designed to win our belief. Without winning that belief, Dickens cannot hope to engage us with the moral patterning of his text.

7 0
4 years ago
How is Witchcraft in 1692 similar to terrorism today, according to Baker's argument?​
arsen [322]

Answer:

Emerson W. Baker’s book begins on a surprising note, with a discussion of an artifact in the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Mass. It is a small wooden chest, probably made in the 1670s for two Salem Quakers, Joseph and Bathsheba Pope. The Popes would play a role in the “storm of witchcraft” that broke out in Salem and neighboring towns in 1692. But most contemporary Friends probably will find their role surprising—Joseph and Bathsheba were not innocent victims of hysterical accusations of being witches. Instead they were accusers, adding their testimony to that which hanged, among others, the saintly Rebecca Nurse and John Procter, the central character of Arthur Miller’s drama The Crucible.

The events in and around Salem in 1692 are among the most studied in U.S. history. Baker, an historian at Salem State University, is concerned both with explaining what happened and why. At the center were girls and young women who lived not in the town of Salem proper, but the adjacent community of Salem Farms or Salem Village. The village was convulsed by conflicts between families over land, inheritance, and leadership—the village church had gone through four ministers in 20 years. The accusers claimed that witches and wizards not only tormented them, but also had been responsible for murders and other crimes over the decades. Their targets ranged from those who fit the classic stereotypes of witches—unpopular, marginalized women—to ministers, military leaders, and politicians and their wives. By the fall of 1692, 19 women and men had been convicted and hanged, and several others had died in prison or in the throes of the legal process.

Baker’s greatest contribution to the ongoing discussion of the events of 1692 is his analysis of the judges who presided over the trials and who were responsible for the sentences. They represented the colony’s elite. In 1692, Baker argues, they had something to prove. Most were men who had been educated for the Puritan ministry, but had instead taken up secular careers. Most had held office under the unpopular government of King James II that was overthrown in 1688–1689. Several faced suspicions about the depth of their religious experiences. They had also suffered significant losses from Indian raids on lands they held in Maine. Before 1692, witchcraft trials in Massachusetts were as likely to result in acquittals as convictions. But in 1692, Baker concludes, the judges were “looking for someone to blame.” They found targets in the men and women who came before them.

Quakers are not central to Baker’s account, but they do appear from time to time. No Friends were accused of witchcraft, although a number of the accused had ties to Quaker families. One of Baker’s heroes is Thomas Maule, a Salem Friend who in 1695 published a ferocious denunciation of the trials. Maule, fittingly, would be the ancestor of a long line of Friends who would continue to be argumentative until the twentieth century.

Baker concludes with what he sees as a moral. In 1692, Puritans in Massachusetts were convinced that Satan had “visited their colony and struck a severe blow.” But while at the beginning they saw him as acting through witches, by the end of the year “they came to understand that Satan’s great work had been to delude them into thinking that many devout Puritans and good people were witches.” He warns us today: “change the word witch to terrorist and we can perhaps better appreciate the complexity of the problem that the people of Salem . . . faced in 1692.”

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
Type the Word Definition Academic integrity is the idea that all academic activities should be completed with the highest levels
horrorfan [7]

The correct answer to this open question is the following.

Academic Integrity can be understood as the moral conduct or ethical behavior that the student shows in every single homework, report, or activity it does. Academic integrity invites the student to always be honest and give proper credit to the author or authors he/she is researching and using to do homework. Otherwise, the student would be plagiarising the ideas of other authors. Some important values for academic integrity would be respect, trust, honesty, fairness, commitment, and responsibility.

Always remember that in academics, no cheating, ever. Give the proper credit to the ones that own the idea, and be prepared enough to use your own words to express your ideas.

8 0
4 years ago
Other questions:
  • Which logical fallacy often includes a premise that appeals to what is believed or done by the mainstream or the elite?
    5·1 answer
  • Much of this excerpt focuses on nietzches criticism of religion and society
    11·1 answer
  • Read the paragraph. Then answer the question that follows. Perhaps you wanted pizza for dinner, but were out voted by the rest o
    8·1 answer
  • Using your knowledge of roots what diagnosis would you give to someone who fears campfires dentophobia pyrophobia sophophobia th
    15·1 answer
  • Encuentra y escribe 4 oraciones que expresan disgusto que no lleven el verbo like
    11·1 answer
  • Can someone plz help me with this one problem plz!!!
    10·1 answer
  • What does the narrator in gravity realize by the end of the story
    11·1 answer
  • When the author describes the natural landscape around her as if it were a woman changing her appearance, what does that say abo
    10·1 answer
  • The overall structure of Pausch's Last Lecture supports his purpose of enabling the childhood dreams of others because it allows
    11·2 answers
  • List five words that contain the Greek or Latin root/affix calc-stone
    11·2 answers
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!