Answer:
Another example of 1) English Patriotism and 2) Henry trying to be "one of the guys,." He's offering them the chance to be elevated to the status of gentleman because of their bravery. Can also be compare this to the way in which the French discuss the battle of Harfleur, which is over-confident and basically talks about how they're going to take advantage of how weak the English army is. Talks about how they'll get to show their scars and remember what happens today, years from now==manhood. Henry implicits elevates the men he's fighting alongside to his own level of nobility-- so is he pushing himself down, or pulling the other soldiers up?
Answer:
you read the question again so that you understand what exactly is being asked of you. you can justify an answer by reading the information that you have and finding things that support your claim
Answer:
<em>the </em><em>correct</em><em> </em><em>answer</em><em> </em><em>is </em><em>b.</em>
Explanation:
p=59
w=11
now,
p=2(l+w)
50=2(x+11)
50=2x+22
<em><u>PLEASE</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>MARK</u></em><em><u> ME</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>AS </u></em><em><u>BRAINLIST</u></em>
Hi, the correct option would be the third option - "the keys on the kitchen counter are mine". In all other examples "on the kitchen counter" has an adverbial meaning, and the third example is the only one where this phrase is used as an adjective.
Answer:
The reason why the Declaration of Independence is so persuasive is that Jefferson uses deductive arguments, which includes examples of Britain's wrong doings, which gives the person reading the document a chance to see exactly why they are breaking from Great Britain.