I would need the passage to help
Answer:
Many people with bad joints do exercises to restore the flexible function in their joints?
Explanation: Its a bad answer but it works
Answer:
The correct answers are:
On wednesday night Juliet will drink the distilling liquor.
Juliet will feel A cold and drowsy humor and will fall asleep.
Thursday morning Paris will find her "dead" in her bed.
Then Juliet's family will take her to the Capulets family vault.
In the meantime, Friar Laurence will tell Romeo about her plans.
Finally, Romeo will see Juliet waking up and take her to Mantua.
Explanation:
This was Friar Laurence's perfect plan. He tells Juliet that she should go and marry Paris, that he would give her a liquor and that when she drank it she would fall asleep, but on the outside she would seem dead for 42 hours. Enough time for Paris to find her "dead" in her bed and the family can take her to the family vault. Once there, Juliet would wake up from her dream and her great love, Romeo, would be waiting for her to be able to escape to Mutua together.
The plan seemed perfect, except that Romeo received the news of Juliet's death before receiving the letter from Friar Laurence, which caused him to kill himself, and by the time Juliet woke up and saw him dead, she also decided to kill herself .
Answer:
Imagining this scenario, I feel like being in the story and definitely I will be afraid and panicking. I think this is a scenario of a fire outbreak and the solvent that caused the fire is highly inflammable.
Explanation:
From the excerpt, we can deduce that the event taking place is a fire outbreak. The voice that screamed "Fire!" reveals that there was an outbreak. Also, the way the solvent spread depicts that the solvent is highly inflammable and was engulfing even the kitchen door.
The events of fire outbreak always cause fear and panic. So, imagining myself being in the story, I will definitely be afraid.
Hello!
Your questions is incomplete. The complete poem is:
An Arab Shepherd Is Searching For His Goat On Mount Zion
An Arab shepherd is searching for his goat on Mount Zion / and on the opposite hill I am searching for my little boy. / An Arab shepherd and a Jewish father / both in their temporary failure. / Our two voices met above / the Sultan’s Pool in the valley between us. / Neither of us wants the boy or the goat / to get caught in the wheels / of the “Chad Gadya” machine. / Afterward we found them among the bushes, / and our voices came back inside us / laughing and crying. / Searching for a goat or for a child has always been / the beginning of a new religion in these mountains.
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The whole text has cultural references. Mount Zion, by its use and historical significance, the "sultan's swimming pool", being a specific reference of an Arab culture and the Chad Gaya, for being a musical style. The Arab shepherd, however, enters more into the perspective of common sense, and could be seen, from an alternative perspective, as an emptiness of cultural meaning.
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a. the Arab shepherd</span>