1. disheveled (meaning unkempt, messy, hurried, etc)
2. infuriated (mad, angry, ticked, etc)
Both "Witness to the Tragedy" and "Hope Survives in Search for Katrina's Missing" portray the scenario that took place in cities affected by the violence of Hurricane Catrina. However, in "Witness to the Tragedy" we are presented with a more personal account. The article written in first person shows the destruction and sadness of families to survive during the violent flood that was established in the region. First-person language makes the story personal and exciting.
"Hope Survives in Search for Katrina's Missing", however, reports the search for people who were not rescued at the time of the tragedy, have been lost to their families and are being sought, alive or dead. Although this article has a less personal and emotional tone than the first, the article uses a first-person language that manages to bring the reader closer to the author and provide a strong empathy for the exposed theme.
This question is about the article "What is Freedom?" by Jerald M. Jellison and John H. Harvey
Answer and Explanation:
1. The authors conclude that freedom means, for people, the ability to make choices. That's because they are always defining freedom as the ability to make their own decisions, to go where they want, to do what they are planning, to think for themselves, to make their own decisions, among other things always related to choices.
2. An example of denial is presented in the text, when the authors show that even though people see freedom as the ability to make choices, they do not feel free, when the options of choice are not attractive and do not seem to benefit by feeling so oppressed and forced to choose something bad. With that, we can conclude that people reframe the sense of freedom and affirm that bad feelings and negative effects are not freedoms.
Answer:I don't think its a trend i think its more of a global problem
Explanation: