A valid hypothesis is one that is <span>testable and rejectable
</span><span>.Recorded data may be quantitative or qualitative.
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<span> If a measurement is precise, it is highly repeatable or reproducible is true</span>
I can just give you a suggestion of a story that I have watched. It's " How the Grinch stole the Christmas". The theme of the cartoon is that Christmas is not about presents. One evidence from the cartoon is that after Grinch stole all the presents from the people's houses, they were still happy and they were singing together by holding hands like the presents were nothing for them. At the end the Grinch realized his mistake and gave back all the staffs that he stole.
I hope it helps a little.
The answer is the first option: We live on the same street.
The nominative case takes subject pronouns only, since the pronouns are the subjects of the sentences. They are: I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they.
Options b, c and d have object pronouns - them, me and him - acting as subject pronouns and, consequently, as subjects to the verbs, making the sentences grammatically wrong.
A theme could be "life or death" because throughout the novel because for an example Montags wife attempts suicide until montag finds her and calls for emergency help and saves her life, and while they were trying to help her its unclear if she was going to live or die, so while all this is happening monag starts to womder what life really is.
When writing to get a job or college application, you should be totally honest. Like, raely put a joke or anything "funny" in it. Because when you fill these out, whatever you put in them, has to be true. Ex: Because, for one, if you get to the job/college, and can't do what you said you could do in the application. Your gonna get fired, or kicked out of college(maybe). It would be very embarrassing, and you could loose whatever you had.
I hope this makes sense, and I hope it helps!! Good luck ;)