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zysi [14]
3 years ago
11

What is Personal Security?

English
1 answer:
Andrew [12]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

I'll look into that right now bro i got you

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Choose the sentence that is correctly punctuated. A. The beach is used by families who often hold picnics on it​, by sports enth
Maru [420]

Answer:

The answer is; D.(The beach is used by​ families; who often hold picnics on​ it, by sports​ enthusiasts; who engage in swimming​,​ surfing, and​ volleyball, and by casual recreational​ users; who enjoy long walks along the ocean shore.)

Explanation:

Pls mark as braainliest answer

7 0
3 years ago
A Raisin in the Sun:
zvonat [6]

Answer:

Walter Lee Younger is a dreamer who tries to find quick solutions to solve his family's problems. He wanted to invest his father's insurance money to start up a liquor store. He thinks money will solve all his family's problems, but that's not true. One prediction is that he will continue to be this way, which will end up in his relationships with Mama, Ruth and Beneatha to be strained.

The second prediction is that he will change his ways, which is seen in the end of the play when Mr. Lindner offers to pay them to prevent them from moving into the white neighborhood. Walter refuses the money that Mr. Lindner offers so his family can live in their dream home, which shows promise of his personality traits changing, knowing that money won't solve all the problems.

Explanation:

This is what I came up with and I truly hope it helps. It was fun kind of going back to this play cause I read it in my sophomore year of high school, so I hope this helps!

5 0
3 years ago
Conclusion made in the basis of unstated or stated evidence are called_____
Nata [24]
The answer is B. Inferences.
4 0
3 years ago
What does the phrase “a tart temper mellows with age, and a sharp tongue is the only edge tool that grows keener by constant use
abruzzese [7]

The given phrase means that a person with bad temper never gets better or change with age nor does a sharp tongue changed. Instead, a sharp tongue or someone who is constantly nagging only gets better with the constant nagging.

The given phrase is from Washington Irving's "Rip Van Winkle". The story revolves around Rip Van Winkle and how his 'sleep' in the woods resulted in a loss of years where everyone had seemed to be gone while he was asleep in the woods.

  • The phrase was spoken by the narrator while describing Rip Van Winkle.
  • The phrase <em>"a tart temper never mellows with age"</em> means that a person with a sour or even a bad temper never changes with age.
  • This, in other words, means growing old has nothing to do with a person's change in attitude or temper.
  • Likewise, the continuing phrase <em>"a sharp tongue is an only edged tool that grows keener by constant use"</em> also refers to a person's character or attitude.
  • The phrase meant that someone who is good at nagging or complaining only gets better with constant use of the mouth/tongue.
  • This means that a person who's constantly nagging will only find better words and actions to further the nagging.

The given phrase is a metaphor that the speaker made to highlight a person's behavior, attitude. This phrase can be seen or found in Irving's short story.  

Learn more about Rip Van Winkle here:

brainly.com/question/14389121

4 0
2 years ago
PLSSS HELP ME!!!!
joja [24]

Answer:

The next morning, Ponyboy wakes in the church and finds a note from Johnny saying that he has gone into town to get supplies. When Johnny returns, he brings a week’s supply of baloney and cigarettes, and a paperback copy of Gone with the Wind, which he wants Ponyboy to read to him. Ponyboy makes a wisecrack and Johnny tells him he is becoming more like Two-Bit every day. Johnny insists that they cut their hair to disguise themselves, and he bleaches Ponyboy’s hair.

For the next week, the boys hide out at the church, reading Gone with the Wind, smoking, and eating sandwiches. The boys admire the southern gentlemen in Gone with the Wind, and Johnny points out that they remind him of Dally. Ponyboy disagrees. He prefers the other greasers to Dally. Most of the greasers remind Ponyboy of the heroes in novels, but Dally is so real he is frightening. Later, Ponyboy recites a Robert Frost poem, “Nothing Gold Can Stay.” The poem touches Johnny.

After about five days, Dally shows up at the church with a letter to Ponyboy from Sodapop. Dally says the police approached him about Bob’s murder and he told them that the perpetrators fled to Texas. He takes Johnny and Ponyboy to the Dairy Queen and tells them that a state of open warfare exists between the greasers and the Socs, who are furious about Bob’s death. He also lets slip that Cherry Valance, feeling responsible for the murderous encounter, has been acting as a spy for the greasers. He adds that in a day’s time the two groups will meet for a rumble.

Summary: Chapter 6

Johnny shocks Dally by telling him he wants to go back home and confess to his crime. Dally tries to change Johnny’s mind, telling him he never wants to see Johnny hardened the way prison would harden him. Johnny is adamant and points out that his own parents would not care what happens to him, but Ponyboy’s brothers care about him and want to see him. Swearing under his breath, Dally begins to drive Johnny and Ponyboy home. As they drive past the church where Ponyboy and Johnny have been staying, they see that it is on fire. Ponyboy thinks he and Johnny must have started the fire with a cigarette butt, so the boys jump out of the car to examine the blaze.

At the church, they find a group of schoolchildren on a picnic. Suddenly, one of the adult chaperones cries out that some of the children are missing, and Ponyboy hears screaming from inside the church. Acting on instinct, he and Johnny climb into the burning building through a window. At the back of the church, they find the children huddled together and terrified. As he runs through the smoky inferno, Ponyboy wonders why he is not scared. He and Johnny lift the children out of the window. Dally appears and yells that the roof is about to cave in. As they lift the last child out the window, the roof crumbles. Johnny pushes Ponyboy out of the window, and then Ponyboy hears Johnny scream. Ponyboy starts to go back in for Johnny, but Dally clubs him across the back and knocks him out.

When Ponyboy wakes, he is in an ambulance, accompanied by one of the schoolteachers, Jerry Wood. The teacher tells him that his back caught on fire and that the jacket he was wearing, which Dally lent him, saved his life. He says that Dally was burned but will probably be fine. Johnny, however, is in very bad shape—he was struck by a piece of burning timber as it fell, and may have broken his back. The man jokingly asks Ponyboy if he and Johnny are professional heroes. Ponyboy tells him that they are juvenile delinquents.

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Chapters 3–4

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Chapters 5–6 page 2

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Character List

CHARACTERS

Ponyboy Curtis: Character Analysis

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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