1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Sever21 [200]
3 years ago
12

The Article says:

English
1 answer:
Brrunno [24]3 years ago
6 0
The answer is B.going around
You might be interested in
What is the book Ortega about?
Tcecarenko [31]
Taken from his mother when he was just weeks old, Ortega grows up in a research lab run by Dr. Whitmore, a world-renowned expert in primates and language development.  A series of surgeries reshape the gorilla’s tongue and palate, and insert an artificial voice box into his throat.  Ortega receives intensive social, educational and language support and, at ten years old, is shown to have an IQ of 98, normal for a human being.  Having exhausted all avenues of scientific research into Ortega, Dr. Whitmore devises a new study, one sure to garner plenty of interest in the scientific community and plenty of grant money from large corporations; he decides to send the young gorilla to school. So it is arranged that Ortega will attend Grade 5 at a local elementary school, and Dr. Whitmore and his research assistant, Dr. Susan, will monitor how he does in this new environment.  Though the gorilla is reluctant to leave the safety of his life with Dr. Susan, and makes that reluctance evident, he finds himself dressed in new clothes, his backpack on his back, meeting his new teacher, Miss Rutherford, outside her Grade 5 classroom. Ortega is confronted by the curiosity, the fear and, often, the cruelty of his new schoolmates and their parents.  Nasty tricks and taunting notes send the young gorilla running for the door.  He also makes friends with Peter, a bright and intense kid, who has prepped for Ortega’s arrival by reading up on gorillas, and his friends Eugene and Janice, and finds himself eating lunch each day with them all in Peter’s tree fort. As he comes to be accepted as a person in his own right by Miss Rutherford and his school friends, Ortega begins to question who he is, particularly in the eyes of Dr. Susan, his surrogate mother, and the head of the research lab, Dr. Whitmore.  Is he a person, equal to though different from his human friends and handlers, or is he, as Dr. Whitmore asserts, a laboratory animal owned and entirely controlled by Project Ortega? With his enormous appetite for fruit, his instinctive gorilla behaviours, and his preference for knuckle walking, Ortega clearly isn’t human, but he has a smart mouth, loves Dr. Susan and her mother, whom he calls Grandma, and his new friends, Peter, Eugene and Janice, and reacts time and again like any Grade 5 student.  Often locked in his room in the lab and watched through a two-way mirror or videotaped, Ortega has rescued and made pets of other lab animals, a jar of fruit flies he calls the Lancaster-Stone family, Norman, a frog, and Siggy, a mouse.  He is expected to walk upright because, in Dr. Whitmore’s eyes,  it helps to reinforce the significance of the researcher’s accomplishments with the young gorilla, but is collared and leashed to transit the airport. <span>When he sabotages Dr. Whitmore’s keynote address to an important scientific conference, Ortega is informed by the furious researcher that the Project that bears his name will be cancelled, and he will be sold.  However Dr. Whitmore reckons without Peter, Eugene and Janice who carry out a desperate and inspired plan to rescue the young gorilla from his locked room and hide him away where the animal control officers won’t find him.</span>
7 0
4 years ago
Read the excerpts from the article Amazing Plants:
stiks02 [169]

The author use the chosen text structure for the excerpts because Excerpt 1 uses a comparison structure to explain the similarities between acacia trees and grazing animals, and Excerpt 2 uses a comparison structure to explain the similarities between the corpse flower and rotting meat.

<h3>What is an excerpt?</h3>

An excerpt refers to ideas ,words,sentence,phrases,that is extracted from a paragraph or literature work.whicj passes meaning to the reader.

Therefore, The author use the chosen text structure for the excerpts because Excerpt 1 uses a comparison structure to explain the similarities between acacia trees and grazing animals, and Excerpt 2 uses a comparison structure to explain the similarities between the corpse flower and rotting meat.

Learn more about excerpt below.

brainly.com/question/4277805

#SPJ1

3 0
3 years ago
Read the excerpt from Thomas Paine's work "The Crisis" No. 1. Britain, with an army to enforce her tyranny, has declared that sh
tino4ka555 [31]

Answer:

Trapped.

Explanation:

The word "denotation" refers to the literal meaning of the given word. In this case, the denotative meaning of the word "bound" is "trapped".

Thomas Paine expressed his anger in his "The Crisis No. 1" when he talked of the British monarchy's <em>"right to bind us in all cases whatsoever"</em>. He then went on to say that <em>"if bound in that manner, is not slavery, then is there not such a thing as slavery upon the earth..."</em> Here, he used the word "bound" to refer to the act of being restrained, captured, kept captive, etc.

Thus, the correct answer is the first option.

4 0
3 years ago
Read the passage from The Odyssey - Penelope.
IrinaK [193]

We can actually see here that based on the epic simile, the reader should envision Penelope as a queen who is righteous.

<h3>What is simile?</h3>

Simile is actually known to be figure of speech which uses "as" or "like" to compare two dissimilar things but which may be similar in a way.

We see here comparing Penelope to a "god-fearing king" makes her to be a queen who is righteous.

Learn more about simile on brainly.com/question/2416704

#SPJ1

4 0
2 years ago
In the "Reality" poem, how does the analysis of this poem differ after the line, "Unless I choose to reverse my thoughts"?
Nata [24]
It mean to think about it as the opposite of what they said or go back and think again
4 0
4 years ago
Other questions:
  • What part of a sentence is "in the suburbs" ?
    5·1 answer
  • What does a good introduction have?
    13·2 answers
  • Which sentence should be revised to reduce wordiness?
    6·1 answer
  • "Both have no direct relationship but a free efficient expression binds them" what are they? (it's a brain game)
    12·2 answers
  • How does the mother defend her child to the old duck
    5·1 answer
  • Once they get there. Is this a sentence or fragment?
    11·1 answer
  • 1. What are three qualities that make this poetry?​
    12·2 answers
  • It’s the 5 one because I looked it up
    6·1 answer
  • PLEASE ANSWER , 20 POINTS
    10·1 answer
  • Everyday after work paul to kiss muddy boots off on the step of the front porch alice would have a fit if the boots made it so f
    9·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!