Answer:
A Garibaldi is the right answer
The type of supporting material that you employ in an essay is directly related to the claim that you make in your paper. Different claims and arguments require different levels of evidence and support. Moreover, the type of support they need will also vary. Some claims might need numerical support, while others might need the consensus of experts.
For example, imagine a historical essay that wants to prove that World War II was more deadly than World War I. This essay would most likely need statistical evidence that would come from public records. Compare this to an essay that argues that World War II had a deeper impact on culture and society than World War I. This essay will require different types of materials, such as essays written by other people supporting either position.
The narrator, is the protagonist and she starts explaining that she is a teenager. She knows what the latest styles are, she reads the current editorials, she listens to the radio... She wants us to know that she is not a silly girl. In fact, she is a rational thinker. But in fact, when the boy takes her hand and invite her to the sakiting rink, she abandons all her rationality and she believes when he says that he will call her. When days pass by and he doesn't, she says " I'm not so really dumb".
All that, indicates the conflict: she is a sixteen year old, naive and soft in character behind that tough exterior.
Answer:
of what phrase, i can help but i need more info than this
Explanation:
sorry ;(
The first is an armed head, summoned to warn Macbeth that Macduff is coming back to Scotland to ruin him. The second apparition is a bloody child and it tells Macbeth that no man born of a woman can do him harm. This gives Macbeth great confidence: "Then live Macduff: what need I fear of thee?" (4.1.78-80). The third apparition is that of a child wearing a crown and holding a tree. It declares:
Macbeth shall never vanquish'd be until
Great Birnam wood to high Dunsinane hill
<span>Shall come against him (4.1.87-90). </span>
<span>Macbeth is sure that the third apparition's prophecy will never be, for 'who can impress the forest?' or 'bid the tree unfix his earth-bound roots?' (4.1.91-3). </span>