Here is the answer that would best complete the given statement above. <span>The author of “Nolan Bushnell” states that “It’s very clear that game playing grows dendrites. So people are smarter. The brain is something that if you exercise it you can be smarter. It turns out that games are that exercise.” because WHEN YOU ARE PLAYING A GAME, THIS STIMULATES THE BRAIN EVERY TIME YOU THINK OF ANY STRATEGIES OR TECHNIQUES IN ORDER TO PASS A CERTAIN LEVEL OF THE GAME. Thinking and coming up of a strategy needs a lot of concentration and focus. Hope this answer helps. </span>
Answer:
I/we
Explanation:
In first person point of view the narrator is a character in the story, dictating events from their perspective using "I" or "we."
Answer:
Some people have imaginations sparked only by what they can see; I blame this blinkered empiricism for the parks overwhelmed with people, the bars, until a few nights ago, thickly thronged. My imagination is the opposite. I fear everything invisible to me. From the enclosure of my house, I am afraid of the suffering that isn’t present before me, the people running out of money and food or drowning in the fluid in their lungs, the deaths of health-care workers now growing ill while performing their duties. I fear the federal government, which the right wing has so—intentionally—weakened that not only is it insufficient to help its people, it is actively standing in help’s way. I fear we won’t sufficiently punish the right. I fear leaving the house and spreading the disease. I fear what this time of fear is doing to my children, their imaginations, and their souls.
hope it helps :)