Answer:
I'll tell you one
Explanation:
someone will clean this room tomorrow.
this room will be cleaned by someone tomorrow
Question:
Read the excerpt from "The North American Indian Apache Mythology-Creation Myth."
"You, The Lightning Rumbler, shall have charge of the clouds and the water. You, Sky Boy, I leave in charge of the sky. Earth Daughter, you are to look after the crops of our people; and you, The Boy, must care for their health and guide them." He then called The Girl to him and placed her in charge of all.
Based on this excerpt, readers can conclude that the Apaches
A) live in female-only communities.
B) have a council of elders that leads the tribe.
C) believe different gods rule the elements.
D) view the sky as more important than the earth.
Answer:
The answer is C)
Explanation:
The explanation is very explicit.
From the excerpt, lightning rumbler, sky boy, earth daughter, the boy, the girl are all gods which rule different elements.
The elements in question are:
- Clouds and Water
- The Sky
- Crops of the people
- Health and Guidance
Cheers!
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
This question is incomplete because it does not attach the excerpts. You forgot to attach the text titled "Amazing Plants" and the text title "Trapped by a Predator."
Without the texts, we cannot read what is the content.
However, trying to help you we did some deep research and can comment on the following.
The information that the reader learns from "Amazing Plants" that is missing in "Trapped by a Predator" is a description of the pitcher plant.
In the excerpt "Amazing Plants,<em>"the author refers to the pitcher plan as follows: Pitcher plants are another quiet carnivore. The plants are long, pitcher-like tube shapes, with wide bottoms full of water to catch and digest their prey. Pitcher plants use different strategies to attract prey. Some give off sweet smells, while others produce nectar. Pitchers have been known to consume anything from insects to small lizards and rodents."</em>
In the excerpt "Trapped by a Predator," the author focuses more on his personal experience of how he became interested in Botanics and plants when as a child he was on a trip to Willington. North Carolina.