I'll answer question #2 :)
"Why does Heck Tate insist that Bob Ewell's death was self-inflicted?"
Heck Tate keeps insisting that Bob Ewell fell on his knife because he does not want to drag Boo Radley into the public eye. Boo has been out of society for far too long, and although Heck knows that Boo killed Bob for a good reason, he might think that the public will not. Or yet, they'll make him a hero and he'll be overcrowded with gifts from the neighborhood. Heck knows that Boo does not want to be made public, and is a very shy person, so he knows that it is best to just tell everyone that Bob Ewell fell upon his own knife.
~Hope I helped!~
Answer:
a step-by-step procedure for workplace processes
an explanation of a key detail in a company policy
a reference to the employer as the sender
a direct address to the company’s employees
Explanation:
Workplace documents are clear, logical, and concise.
The statements that show a document is a from a workplace are ones that are:
-directed at employees- procedures and instructions are regularly communicated to employees
- shows the employer who sent it - workplace documents show a trail of sender and receiver
- explains company policy - this shows it originated in the workplace
- step by step procedures - guides employee on acceptable way of carrying out tasks
The statement of day when a document was sent does not show that it is a workplace document. Informal or non workplace documents also show date when correspondence was made.
If wide is the opposite of narrow, then it would be I'd (I would).
These words give the reader a feeling of hope either for the main character or another character. It lightens the mood and stresses a more positive scenario.
I'm not sure exactly which race you're referring to, but in the "match
race of the century", Sea-biscuit raced against a horse named War
Admiral.