Answer:
this is what I got, hope it helps
Explanation:
Answer:
D, not narrow enough enough for a research topic because it is a subject and not a question.
Explanation:
When picking an idea for a research topic you will need to pick an aspect of the topic that will interest you and your intended audience, have a clear grasp of it and most importantly make the topic narrow enough that you can cover it within the expected time frame.
The The idea "southern cooking" is a broad topic and not narrow enough as there are tons of information about southern cooking and it will be hard to combine all of the information you are finding out about "southern cooking".
Answer:
The mall is closed yet I need some new clothes.
My mom went to the store yet she did not get any cereal for me.
I forgot to do my homework so I got a bad grade in class.
The school is having a dance but only eighth graders are invited.
Explanation:
Answer:
The significance of freedom in the story is that it means different things to different people and that sometimes, they don't realise that they don't have it until circumstances collaborate to communicate this to them.
Mrs Mallard was content with her life as it was until the misinformation regarding her husbands' death.
She had started to cry but then somehow realised that her husbands' death meant freedom to her. She mulled over the possibilities of this freedom. Freedom from having to do his biding most of the time. Freedom to do what she wanted, how she wanted, when she wanted.
Ironically, Brently Mallard who happened to be alive walks through the door and unintentionally triggers the event that would lead to the demise of this wife.
Could it be said that he too is free of such a woman who regardless of the love he has for her regards him as a restriction on her freedom?
Could it also be said that Mrs Mallard is finally free of her heart condition?
The Author cleverly presents freedom as an interesting dynamic here and makes use of the literary device of "Irony" in depicting the concept of freedom and it's cost.
Whether it is freedom as perceived by Mrs Mallard which she thought had come as a result of her husband's death; or
Freedom as perceived by the reader to Mrs Mallard from her heart condition which comes with her death; or
Freedom that may be inputted on Mr Mallard. "Freedom" from a woman who he loved but who had only him occasionally and who welcomed his death as an opportunity for freedom, in the end, it does appear that the author intends to portray the fact that freedom comes with a price.
Cheers!
Answer:
As the story opens, we meet 17-year-old Billy Weaver, who has traveled alone from London to Bath on an afternoon train. By the time he arrives in Bath, it's quite cold outside and late. Weaver asks the porter, a person who transports luggage, where he might find a nearby hotel. The porter suggests a pub, telling Weaver, 'Try The Bell and Dragon. They might take you in.' The author continues the story by telling us how young Billy is and that he's never traveled to Bath before. He knows no one in town. He's a rather ambitious young man, though, and he looks up to the 'big shots up at Head Office' for their briskness in all their tasks.
Explanation: