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kolezko [41]
3 years ago
7

Hi can anyone please help me with this article writing please asap! ​

English
1 answer:
Nikitich [7]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

I think that you should have a balance of food. And it depends on the time. As in, sometimes you might be in a rush, so you quickly grab something from the nearest shop. But then, lets say its dinner time, you should make yourself something good!

<h2>Have a nice life! Hope this helps! </h2>
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1.06 Quiz: Analyze "Kubla Khan" Please Check My Answers:
aleksandrvk [35]
1. Reason
2. Daffodils
3. Personification
4.Simple
5.<span>Imaginative creation
6.</span><span>Nature's way is superior to humanity's way
7.</span><span>Can nourish the soul
8.</span><span>Nature offers wisdom
9.</span><span>A fragmented dream
10.</span><span>The value of the individual

These are 100% the correct answers! If you choose these then I promise you will get a 100% Good Luck! <3
</span>
6 0
3 years ago
Which sentence does not contain misplaced or dangling modifiers?
Svetach [21]
My best advice here is to read every answer choice out loud and see which one flows best and makes the most sense to you. the correct answer is A. every other answer choice places "written too quickly" in an awkwardly.

B. "many errors, written too quickly" -- the hind part of that sentence is confusing because you can't tell what was written too quickly. because the comma comes right after "errors," one might assume that the errors themselves were written too quickly, rather than the article. the subject is unclear so this answer choice is incorrect.

C. "written too quickly about the recent election" is the first clause in that sentence. it doesn't make sense. what was written too quickly? what was about the recent election? again, the reader wouldn't know how to apply the info given in the first part of the sentence to the last part.

D. "the article written too quickly" -- written is assumed to be the verb, here. the article written doesn't make sense. the article WAS written does. but still, the "written too quickly about the recent election" is a mess in the middle of the sentence because when the subject is introduced first, as "the article" was, it's difficult to find your way through the misplaced modifier to find the verb that applies to this subject.

A gives the modifier first, separating it from the rest of the sentence with a comma to show that "written too quickly" is a conditional of sorts. because it was written too quickly... it had many errors. it's more logical and it doesn't split your subject and verb up so awkwardly.
4 0
3 years ago
The year and the legacy you want to leave -are you on the path to achieve all that you want?
iren [92.7K]

Answer:

12345678

Explanation:

2345678

6 0
3 years ago
HELP! HELP HELP <br> What is hate speech and how can it potentially lead to genocide?
sesenic [268]

While hate speech can often be dismissed as bigoted ranting or merely painful words, it could also serve as an important warning sign for a much more severe consequence: genocide. Increasingly virulent hate speech is often a precursor to mass violence. World Policy Institute fellow Susan Benesch, along with Dr. Francis Deng, the United Nations Special Advisor on the Prevention of Genocide (OSAPG), is attempting to find methods for preventing or limiting such violence,  by examining the effects of speech upon a population. Initiated in February 2010, Benesch’s project,  is funded by the MacArthur Foundation, the US Institute of Peace and the Fetzer Institute. It was inspired by the high levels of inflammatory speech preceding Rwandan genocide and the Bosnian war of the  mid-1990s. Since then, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda  has recognized the relationship between hate speech and genocide by trying the world’s first “incitement to genocide” cases, convicting radio broadcasters, a newspaper editor, and even a pop star for the crime. Following suit, the International Criminal Court has indicted a Kenyan radio host for broadcasts preceding the post-election violence of 2007-2008 in Kenya

In 1995 the ICC convicted Jean-Paul Akayesu, a former Rwandan bourgmestre—or mayor—for incitement to genocide after he  gave a speech that was immediately followed by massacres. Benesch noted, however, that Akayesu’s words did not catalyze genocide in the country, since mass killings had already begun elsewhere in Rwanda by the time he spoke.  

On October 28, 2010Benesch joined Deng at the United Nations for a panel discussion on their project and genocide prevention. Populations do not rise up  overnight to commit spontaneous, collective acts of genocide. Deng said. They “undergo collective social processes fueled by inflammatory speech.”  

There is an important distinction between limiting speech and limiting its dangerousness, Benesch said. It is vital to examine the context in which speech is made in order to properly determine the motivation behind it – and the effect it is likely to have. The dangerousness of speech cannot be estimated outside the  context in which it was made or disseminated, and its original message can become lost in translation.

Within context, speech can take on new meaning. “Are there particular aspects of the context that make a particular speech act more dangerous?” Benesch asked her audience on Thursday. “In other words, [are there factors] more likely to catalyze a particular form of incitement, like incitement to genocide, than other factors?”

Speech can also become less harmful if its sources are not credible, discredited or unseen by the population.

“The law has not yet distinguished fully between incitement to genocide on the one hand, and on the other hand the much broader and variously defined category of hate speech,” Benesch said. She is working on developing a coherent definition so as to distinguish incitement to genocide from hate speech, a difficult task as a “particularly heinous crime is pressed up, conceptually speaking, against a particular cherished and fundamental right, which is the right of freedom of expression.” The challenge lies in walking the fine line between monitoring and recognizing incitement to genocide and avoiding measures that may lead to over-restricted speech.

It is possible to limit the dissemination of speech if not the speech itself, which is a possibility that may be conducive to the goal of not infringing upon freedom of speech and expression. In striving to identify what it is exactly that makes a particular speech act “hate speech” on the one hand or dangerous “incitement to genocide” on the other, Benesch presented her theory: that hate speech can be performed successfully by anyone, but not everyone can successfully use speech to incite genocide. The power and influence of the figure  addressing the speech to a particular audience, along with the contextual factors of that speaker and that audience (i.e. creating false scenarios of self-defense, in which the targeted group are accused of undue murderous acts), are substantial factors in distinguishing hate speech from incitement to genocide. The proposed policy responses include: logistical efforts to hinder inflammatory broadcasts (such as jamming radio waves), prosecution and arrests, and education. Getting the public involved and aware of the poisonous nature of inflammatory speech and how it can manipulate the masses is a key strategy in combating mass violence.

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
PLEASE HELP MEE ASAPPP
alexira [117]

T. J. Palm was born in 1951 in Waterloo Iowa. And then at the age of two and a half was moved to California. She married at a young age and had one son Greg. She lived in California until she was 28, when she and her son moved to Las Vegas Nevada where she met her husband now of 23 years. She has two grand sons Zack and Austin. She now resides in a very small town high in the mountains of Colorado, on a horse ranch with her husband, her best friend and godson. Dawn and Lane moved to the ranch and into an apartment that was built for them to enjoy the rural life first hand. T. J’s Love for animals started to grow at the age of 3. When she got her first horse for her eighth birthday it was a quarter horse mare named Babe, who she promptly fell off the first time she rode her. T. J. has since owned thirty-nine horses and ponies, and she can’t count how many dogs’ cats and other animals. She loves, and has loved, all of them. In turn all of her life’s experiences has lead her to write this book. She has spent her whole life caring and enjoying them, and this is one of many stories to come.

I bet you can make this work somehow ...

4 0
3 years ago
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