Getting together with friends, pouring wine, sipping tea, and talking politics is pure democracy. And if you want to know the truth, a letter-writing party is also good for the soul. I've been throwing letter-writing parties for over 10 years; in bars, at cafés, inside museums and, maybe best of all, at home. Lately, lots of people have asked me how, and I'm happy to help—personally, I'm busy trying to help foster the kind of world The Daily Show co-creator Lizz Winstead once described, in which people "incorporate a little bit of activism into their social lives, and so it becomes something that you do—like your yoga practice." I hear the word "normalize" a lot: Let's normalize letter writing! (And phone calls. And demonstrations. And difficult conversations. But for now, I'll focus on writing letters.) Let's have a party
Answer:
, but they soon realized the horror of warfare. Revised Sentence: If, at first, the boy soldiers were excited to be fighting in a battle, soon they would realize the horror of warfare
Answer:
Marilla grows anxious.
Explanation:
Here in the story: "Thereupon Anne held her tongue so obediently and thoroughly that her continued silence made Marilla rather nervous, as if in the presence of something not exactly natural.", shows that Marilla grows nervous when Anne didn't talk.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
If the question was
"Mr. A: he is coughing continuously
Mr B: he ought___ Doctor."
Then the answer choice that would fit the sentence would be "to see" because then the sentence would be "he ought <u>to see</u> Doctor."
I hope this helps!