Answer:
There is one strong claim against it:
<em>Schools should not allow kids.... </em><em>distraction.</em>
Explanation:
Those who are not strong claims:
<em>In the latest survey... </em><em>kids said</em>
Anything that is based on what kids say can´t be a strong claim.
<em>Not every kid can have... because... </em><em>expensive</em><em>...</em><em> kids do not have jobs</em>
Apart from the fact that child labor is forbidden the economic reason for not allowing cell phones is not the issue. It is a social and educational issue.
And the other claim in favor has one word that makes it rather worthless:
<em>they are helpful tools and allow </em><em>people </em><em>...</em>
As we are talking about kids this claim misses the important point.
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Answer:
I believe it's A.
Explanation:
quotation marks are used to quote people, of course. You add the person's name at the end of it so the reader knows where you got the quote. (I would also say that if you don't put them, people would think you're plagiarizing plagiarizing, but I'm not too clear on that) If you are quoting a line from a book, instead of putting the person's name you put the page of the book.
ex:
"quote" (page #)
I apologise if I am wrong!
Answer:
I do not see choices, but I hope that this helps.
I do not believe that Hamlet was crazy and saw hallucinations of a ghost. He had some problems, but other people saw this ghost before he did. Other people have discussed what they saw and this is not in Hamlet's imagination. He could be really sad that his Father has died, but did he really lose his mind? Probably not.
Explanation:
Since others saw this same ghost, it is not in his head. The ghost is realllllll.