Answer:
The rules for quotation marks around titles vary depending on which style guide you follow. In general, you should italicize the titles of long works, like books, movies, or record albums. Use quotation marks for the titles of shorter pieces of work: poems, articles, book chapters, songs, T.V. episodes, etc.
Explanation:
Answer: By beginning each line with a type of worker
Explanation: You can eliminate answer choice A, because the first line of the excerpt begins with “those,” while the other sentences begin with “the.” Answer choice B cannot be valid because Whitman lists the type of worker at the beginning of such line, as opposed to the end. Answer choice D can easily be eliminated because each line ends with a different word, and none are the same. Therefore, you are left with answer choice C, which is clearly the correct answer, as mechanics, carpenters, masons, and boatman are all brought up within the first three words of each sentence.
Answer:
yeah of course I will
Explanation:
Photosynthesisss is the process by which plants use sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to create oxygen and energy in the form of sugar.
Answer:
The correct answer to the question: What does this excerpt reveal about Caesar´s attitude towards death, would be, A: Caesar´s thinks that the valiant bravely face death, which should not be prevented, or feared.
Explanation:
"The Tragedy of Julius Caesar" is a historical and tragic play that was written by William Shakespeare around 1599. In this particular excerpt Caesar shows that strong men, brave men, are characterized because they confront death without fear, do not run away from it, but rather almost embrace it when the time comes. Whereas the cowardly always seem to run away from death because they fear it, and thus they are always running away from it, because their main characteristic is to run away from everything. The fact of never running from death, of facing it, and accepting it, once, is, according to Caesar, the definition of a brave man.
Answer:
B.
Explanation:
Richard Borshay Lee, a Canadian anthropologist, was born in 1937. He is a Professor of Anthropologist at the University of Toronto. He is well known internationally for his ethnographic studies of hunting and gathering societies. His essay, "Eating Christmas In The Kalahari" was published in 1969. In his essay, he shares a memory of Christmas feast he had with the !Kung Bushmen. He went there to study the hunting and gathering subsistence economy of the !Kung. He shares about the Christmas ox custom of the !Kung, in which they sacrifice a fat and healthy ox. So in response to show gratitude to the !Kung, Lee brings them a fat and healthy slaughtered ox. But instead of being thankful the !Kung's criticized and said that it is a worthless and thin ox. But later he comes to know that it is the way !Kung's receive gifts. They "fool people about that." According to the !Kung's culture if they praise the young for the slaughtered ox, they will be filled with pride. And to avoid making them proud and arrogant they insult the gifts, but in locked rooms they praise it.