Answer:
Ok so we don't really have to choose for you because it's asking the question for you.
Explanation:
So
some future jobs can be a lawyer a doctor an engineer a Laborer. There are so many you can think of!
What you want to be addresses to your future job :)
A way you can is that, you will go to that particular study field depending on what you choose and study there, for example medical field. You will work hard to get to your achievements.
Where you want to work is in a business or a place that really got you interested which is basically directing to what you want to be and your future job.
Because that will be eternal and not for a little while and they r rlly sibling
and the answer is C
Hope this helps and brainliest i need to get to ace pls :)
Answer:
Explanation:
The poet of these lines, Edna St. Vincent Millay, imagines a speaker who is sick of spring and everything that goes along with the season changing. Millay employs word choice such as "stickily" in order to make the beauty of new leaves growing on the trees seem grotesque. She also names the leaves as "little" further diminishing the importance of the season changing. The speaker calls out directly to April in the first line ("To what purpose, April, do you return again?"). This line can be read as threatening or condecensing in light of the word choice in the poem as the speaker is angry at April's return. The speaker concluses that "I know what I know," marking themselves as more knowledgable about the world than spring and April.
This question is about "Fahrenheit 451".
Answer and Explanation:
Clarisse's point of view shows that the current world as well as the world of Bradbury is full of people who allow themselves to be alienated by useless television programs, are blinded by the media and cannot see beyond what is shown to them. However, there are differences between these two worlds, since in the current world we are free to refuse this type of alienation and to improve ourselves in studies, readings, family interaction and our aggrandizement.
Based on this, I believe that Bradbury wants to show how important it is that we consume television media in a controlled manner, without letting it take away what is most important to us, our rationality.
On the roof of Bradbury, Clarisse was raised in a family that encourages reading and reasoning, socializing and conversation, rejecting alienation from TV. This gives Clarissa the perception and the power to search for her own concepts, values and beliefs.