1a. It is not valid to say that basketball is more popular than football at the school because the poll was taken at a basketball game, where mostly, basketball fans are at.
1b. A better method to get a valid conclusion would be to take the poll during lunch or during a break, that way you can get answers from a good variety of students, where you can get basketball and football fans.
2a. City A: 4
City B: 4
2b. City A: 0.8
City B: 0.8
2c. City A: 3.75
City B: 5.25
3a. Howler Monkey mean: 17
Howler Monkey MAD: 0.75
Spider Monkey mean: 14
Spider Monkey MAD: 0.9375
3c. The howler monkey is on average heavier than the spider monkey. This is because the mean is higher and the MAD is lower. The MAD is the measure of by how much the values in the data set are likely to differ from their mean.
Answer:
B. Benjamin bubbled with excitment.
Explanation:
When the verb in a sentence is active langiage, the subject is doing the acting. For example, "Kevin hit the ball"Kevin is the subject who hit the ball.
The poor and the rich. i think
Answers:
1. Alliteration: A repetition of initial sounds in two or more words of a line of poetry
An alliteration is a literaty device in which a series of words begin with the same consonant sound. An example of an alliteration would be "The barbarians broke through the barricade."
2. Caesura: The pause or break in a line of Anglo-Saxon poetry.
A caesura is a stop or pause in a metrical linea that creates a break in a verse, splitting it in equal parts.
3. Comitatus: In the Germanic tradition, the relationship between a leader and his warriors, or a king and his lords.
Comitatus is a term mostly used in the Germanic warrior culture to refer to an oath of fealty taken by warriors to their lords.
4. Kenning: A double metaphor, usually hyphenated. Example, "swan-road" for sea.
Kenning comes from Old Norse tradition and it refers to the combination of words to create a new expression with metaphorical meaning.
Answer: Because they thought it was illegal chemicals
Explanation: