Answer:
Hi! Unfortunately, <u>I can't give you the exact answer since your question is incomplete.</u> I did a little research online, but wasn't able to complete it on my own. What I did find out is that this task is referred to a passage from <em>Faulkner (Ice Hockey)</em>. So, let's try to figure it out together.
Explanation:
In order to pick the correct answer for this question, you have to <em>carefully read the passage and see what its words make you feel.</em> Ask yourself: What does it transmit? How do I feel reading these words? What is its spirit? When you answer this in your own head, you will know the answer. <em>Is the tone of the passage enthusiastic, is it cynical, does it sound like someone is obliged to participate? Does it sound like it is the first time that the person talking sees something? Does it sound like a sports broadcast?</em> Well, think carefully about it, and <u>you'll have the answer.
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Trust yourself, you'll do great!
The poem is talking about a young girl who is very smart, very wise, and gets things beyond her years, though, it can be deciphered many ways.<span />
Answer:
1Prepare the Lye-Water Solution. A major difference between making liquid soap and bar soap is that that it is a "hot process" soap. ...
2Bring the Soap Paste to Trace. ...
3Cook the Paste. ...
4Test the Paste. ...
5Dilute the Paste. ...
6Neutralize the Liquid Soap. ...
7Add Fragrance or Color. ...
8Let the Liquid Soap Rest.
Answer:
It allows him to separate his emotions from the events.
Explanation:
Walter Dean Myers's novel <em>Monster</em><em> </em>revolves around the murder trial that convicted James King while Steve Harmon was released. Through the third omniscient narrator and also at times from the diary entry point of view of Steve, the story presents the trial and also the numerous emotions and the way they are looked at even by their own counsels.
When Steve looks at the trial from a different perspective, from the point of view of the lawyers, the others involved in the trial, he was able to see the facts as they are and not favoring his own feelings. <u>This detachment helps or allows him to separate his emotions from the events, </u>away from his own fears and thoughts that may hinder his perception of what the trail entails. And through his act of writing about the trial as a screenplay, it allows him to see the scene from different perspectives, the viewpoints of the other people, the movement, the scene, the problem, and the murder.