Answer:
B. 14
Explanation:
The agriculture club is planting vegetable gardens on a piece of land that measures 1 3/4 of an acre. Each garden will measure 1/8 of an acre. What is the greatest number of gardens that can be planted?
Solution:
The area of land available for planting = 1 3/4 of an acre = 7/4 acre
The area of the garden = 1/8 acre
The greatest number of gardens that can be planted on the land is the ratio of area of land available for planting to the area of the garden. It is given by:
Greatest number of gardens that can be planted = area of land available for planting / area of the garden
Greatest number of gardens that can be planted = 7/4 acre ÷ 1/8 acre
Greatest number of gardens that can be planted = 14
Sylvia runs home with dollar signs in her eyes but realizes that she physically can't "tell the heron's secret and give its life away" (2.13). It's never explicitly stated why she does this, but we'd peg her obvious love of nature as Exhibit A and her intense experience atop the oak tree as Exhibit B (for more on this tree experience, check out the "Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory" section—there's more there than meets the eye).
Although Sylvia remains in the forest, she never forgets the hunter, nor is she ever quite sure that she's made the right choice. Although Sylvia is a proto-hippie country gal at heart, she knows that the hunter represented a very different path her life could've taken, and as the story ends, she still wonders where it might have taken her. It doesn't exactly reek of regret, but seems more like a sort of forlorn daydream about what might have been. But hey—we all do that sometimes.
Answer:
Explanation:
You will have less ego and think of others.
Answer:
William Bradford was an English Puritan separatist originally from the West Riding of Yorkshire in Northern England. He moved to Leiden in Holland in order to escape persecution from King James I of England, and then emigrated to the Plymouth Colony on the Mayflower in 1620. He was a signatory to the Mayflower Compact and went on to serve as Governor of the Plymouth Colony intermittently for about 30 years between 1621 and 1657. His journal Of Plymouth Plantation covered the years from 1620 to 1646 in Plymouth.
It must be a fact, has to be clear and unbiased