Answer:
In "How Old Man Winter Was Driven Back," the change in seasons is shown as a violent battle. In "How the World Was Made," the change in seasons is shown as a natural, peaceful transition.
Explanation:
In the two myths about creation from the Iroquois, the main idea relayed through the two passages is that of the change in seasons. Both texts provided how the Iroquois people believe to be the transition of seasons from one to the next.
The first passage talks of how the sun <em>"begins to send down his arrows"</em>, suggestive of violent warfare between the seasons. On the other hand, the second passage provides a much calmer and easier transition between the seasons, <em>"Because you did not stay awake, therefore you shall lose your hair every winter."</em>
While both passages talk of the transition, the former shows a violent battle and the latter shows it as a natural, peaceful change.
Thus, the correct answer is the third option.
C because it’s implying that her room was an actual pigsty saying it is extremely messy.
An income statement
<span>profit and loss account</span><span> </span>statement
<span> revenue </span>statement
statement<span> of financial performance
earnings </span>statement
<span> operating </span>statement
<span> </span>statement<span> of operations</span>
It's a ghost story, though dead people don’t necessarily haunt its suburban protagonists. And it's about teenagers who have sex, though it's neither a simple celebration nor condemnation of under-age necking. Instead, "It Follows" both prolongs and heightens the potency of high school-age fears until they appear to be ancient existential terrors. In that sense, "It Follows" is an unbearable, unsinkable mood that descends when you come of age, and never completely dissipates, not even after climactic sexual, or other violent acts.
No lo sé soy un gavhatuber