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Ugo [173]
3 years ago
8

Write three paragraphs in response to a self-selected fictional text. In the first paragraph, introduce the text, author, key ch

aracters, and topics. In the second paragraph, choose and explain one topic from the text, citing evidence from the text to support your explanation. In the final paragraph, describe your personal connection to the text, its characters, and its theme.Please help.Will give brainlest .DONT JUST STEAL PTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! You can pick any text.
English
1 answer:
Juliette [100K]3 years ago
3 0
I need some points bad so that’s why I’m commenting lololol
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my uncle marty has some strange habits, including eating meat with a spoon Is this sentence written correctly
Hitman42 [59]
Capitalize My and Marty and put a period after spoon and you could of did this
(Is this sentence written correctly)

Corrected the sentence :P

My uncle Marty has some strange habits, including eating meat with a spoon.
(Is this sentence written correctly)
8 0
3 years ago
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Read chapters 40-42 of Walk Two Moons and summarize what takes places in 10-12 sentences
Anettt [7]

Answer:Gram falls unconscious, and Sal and Gramps rush her to the hospital in Coeur D'Alene, where the doctors tell them that Gram has had a stroke. Gramps refuses to leave her side for even a second. Sal, reflecting on grandfather's emotions, wonders if he suspects the snakebite caused the stroke and blames himself for taking her to the river. Sal realizes then that just as Gramps should not blame himself for Gram's illness, so she cannot blame herself for her mother's miscarriage. She then recalls the process through which their dog weaned her puppies. Sal's mother had explained to Sal that the mother dog wanted her puppies to be able to take care of themselves in case something happened to her, and Sal realizes that in a way, her mother's trip to Lewiston was her way of trying to make Sal more able to take care of herself. Later that night, Gramps tells Sal that he must stay with Gram, but hands her the car keys and all his money, tacitly giving her permission to drive to Lewiston herself.

Sal spends four hair-raising hours driving down to Lewiston. When she reaches the tall hill just outside the city, she creeps down the hairpin curves, finally stopping at an overlook. Another man stops and, pointing out the broken trees and a faintly glinting hunk of metal, begins to tell her about the terrible bus crash that took place a year ago in exactly that spot. He goes on to tell her that only one person survived the crash, but Sal already knows all this.

Chapter 42: The Bus and the Willow

As dawn is gathering, Sal climbs down the hillside toward the overturned bus. She looks into its mangled and moldy interior and sadly realizes that there is nothing she can do here. When she climbs back up to the car, a sheriff greets her. At first he is angry with her for climbing around the bus and driving at the age of thirteen, but when Sal tells him her story, he drives her to her mother's grave, which is on a hill overlooking the river. Sal sits down to drink in all the details of this spot and, to her joy, finds a nearby "singing tree," a tree with a songbird living in its highest branches. Only then she leaves, knowing that, in a way, her mother is alive in this place.

Chapter 43: Our Gooseberry

The sheriff drives Sal back to Lewiston, lecturing her about the dangers of driving without proper training. Sal questions him about the accident, explaining what she learned the day she decided to talk to Mrs. Cadaver. Mrs. Cadaver had been the lone survivor of the terrible crash, and had sat next to Sal's mother during the entire trip, listening to her stories about Bybanks and her daughter. After the accident, Sal's father, who came to Lewiston to bury his wife, met Mrs. Cadaver and discussed his wife's last days with her. During the conversation with Margaret, Sal had asked her if she planned to marry her father, and Margaret, surprised, explained that her father was still too much in love with her mother to marry anyone else.

When they arrive in Coeur D'Alene, Sal discovers that Gram has died. She finds Gramps, who has already arranged for Gram to be sent back to Kentucky, in a nearby motel. The two move mournfully through the room the rest of the day, and that night, Sal helps Gramps recite his nightly, now slightly altered, mantra: "This ain't my marriage bed, but it will have to do."

Chapter 44: Bybanks

Sal resumes her narration a few months later. She, along with her father and Gramps, are back in Bybanks. Gram is buried in a nearby aspen grove, and Gramps continues to give Sal driving lessons. Sal and Ben exchange letters, and Sal looks forward to an upcoming visit from all her Euclid friends.: Sal closes her story, content with what she has, accepting of what has been, and anticipating for whatwas to come.

6 0
3 years ago
HURRY HELP!!! Will give brainiest !!Determine which story below can be classified as a fairy tale.
Sever21 [200]

Answer:

C

Explanation:

Cinderella because it is a fairytale that was made by Walt Disney and Disney Channel that was later turned into a movie.

3 0
3 years ago
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For though we say that we know nothing about Shakespeare's state of mind, even as we say that, we are saying something about Sha
Aneli [31]

Answer:

A). They emphasize the idea that male writers did not face obstacles that women did at the time.

Explanation:

The underlined sentences 'stresses the idea that male writers did not face obstacles' which is the central idea of 'A Room of One's Own.' Virginia Woolf is one of the most acknowledged and well-known feminist writers. It <u>discusses the subordinate place of women in the history of literature. She says that women have been treated like teenagers and their works have not been expressed or acknowledged adequately</u>. The only human whose work is expressed completely is Shakespeare(representative of all male writers) implying that male writers do not face the similar interruption or obstacles as of women. Thus, she concludes by saying that 'women must have a room of their own to write.'

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3 years ago
Why does Edwards use the word provoked<br>instead of the word angered in this passage?​
stiks02 [169]
Because he was possibly annoyed as well as angry so he decided to use a combination of this to words which supposedly would mean provoked
3 0
3 years ago
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