Hi. Your question is incomplete because you didn't show what should be used in the essay. This prevents the essay from being done exactly as you need it. Anyway, I will write an essay below and I hope this helps you and that you can adapt it to the requirements of your question.
The frightening incident I witnessed happened to myself, which makes it that much more terrifying from my point of view.
That moment happened on a completely normal day where I was ready to go to school. I used to take the bus to get to school as it was so far from my house and I couldn't drive at that time.
I was one of the first to get on the bus and while waiting for the other students to get in and occupy the empty seats, I felt a strong impact, which threw me forward violently. I ended up banging my head on the chair across from me and felt violent stabs of pain in my head. I got up still dizzy and realized that the same had happened to all the students who were on the bus.
We were all scared and not quite understanding what was happening when we saw the driver getting out of the bus and heading towards the back of the vehicle, as the impact came from that direction. All the students, including me, got out of the bus and saw that a car had collided with the back of the school bus.
Although no one was seriously injured, the rear of the bus and the car were destroyed. I had a lot of headaches from hitting it in the chair, but I was more scared because it all happened so suddenly and could have had very scary results.
Explanation:
1. Do you think it is a good idea to ban smoking I-A- <u>in</u> public places?
2. Look at the picture <u>on</u> the wall.
3. My house is <u>at</u> the end of the street.
4. I stopped <u>at</u> Nancy's house.
5. Do you like walking <u>in</u> the garden?
6. I found my keys <u>on</u> the desk.
7. I met him <u>in</u> Paris.
8. He was crying <u>at</u> the back of the classroom.
9 I saw the film <u>on</u><u> </u> the TV...
10 These people live <u>in</u> my hometown...
The correct answer is B. Patrick Henry's "Give me liberty, or give me death". This is a quotation credited to Patrick Henry from a speech he made to the Second Virginia Convention on March 23, 1775, at St. John's Church in Richmond, Virginia. He is credited with having swung the stability in convincing the convention to pass a resolution delivering Virginian troops for the Revolutionary War. Among the delegates to the convention were future U.S. Presidents Thomas Jefferson and George Washington. No matter what the precise words of Henry were, there can be no hesitation of their impact. According to Edmund Randolph, the gathering sat in silence for several minutes afterwards. Thomas Marshall told his son John Marshall, who later became Chief Justice of the United States, which the speech was one of the bravest, passionate, and vigorous pieces of eloquence that had ever been conveyed.
This is definetly a tricky one, but you have to go back to the definition and meaning of 'theme.' A theme is the life lesson of a story or any other form of writing, movies, etc. So, I am not 100% on this, so I will say why I think for each answer. A; I definetly do not think it is A. B; doesn't sound right for me because even though the person in the poem is waiting for the bloom, he/she isn't talking just about waiting, he/she is talking about the time that is going by. C; It sounds like the cherry blossoms may bloom every year, but its not completely clear and doesn't fully match a theme. D; It sounds like the man/women is contemplating the life they have lived through seeing the cherry blossom for years. So I would say the and answer is D since that makes the most sense to me. Hope this helps! :)