Your questions is not so clear, but I will try to answer it as I understand it.
I am a native Spanish speaker so you can trust my answer, if there is a problem with it, it is due the missing information in the question, but I think we can work it out for the best.
In Spanish when you want to make any negative setence in any tense we do not use an auxliliary verb as you do in English, we simply add the word:
No before the verb, for example in:
Yo no <u>quería</u> bailar en la fiesta. (I didn´t <u>wan</u>t to dance at the party)
Mi hermana no <u>piensa</u> antes de hablar. (My sister doesn't <u>think</u> before talking)
No me <u>hables</u>, no <u>quiero</u> nada. (Don't <u>talk</u> to me, I <u>want</u> nothing)
In Spanish we Simply use the Negative Adverb:
No
Answer:
Police Brutality, I think to much people get killed from this and it can be solved!
Anyone under 18 is not mature enough to participate in voting, or elections. Kids may not have as much knowledge in voting as adults. At 18, the legal voting age, you are expected to be mature enough, and have more knowledge in elections.
Hope this helps!
- Alice
I believe that the first and last paragraphs are realism because of their cynical descriptions of harsh things, and the middle two are romanticism because of their embellished/elegant descriptions.
This question seems to be incomplete. However, there´s enough information to find the right answer.
Answer:
In "The Monkey's Paw," By W.W. Jacobs, fate is out of our control, and those who dare to interfere with fate shall face horrible consequences. The monkey's paw that the White family gets from Sergeant-Major grants wishes, but brings unexpected and horrible consequences as well. For example, Mr. White is granted his wish for money, but money comes as a result of his son´s death.
Explanation:
The same theme is explored in the movie PI (1998), directed by Darren Aronofsky. Max, a troubled but intelligent mathematician discovers a formula that predicts the patterns of the world, meaning that our entire existence is already determined by those patterns, so free will can only be an illusion.
The Greek tragedy "Oedipus Rex," by Sophocles, also explores the theme of Fate vs, free-will. An oracle predicts Oedipus will kill his father and marry his mother. The actions of his family to avoid such a destiny end up creating the circumstances that lead to the prediction becoming real.