I believe the answer is the third option "Because outside research adds scholarship to my own opinion." Hope this helps. (ノ◕ヮ◕)ノ*:・゚✧
Pierre Aronnax... <span>Professor Pierre Aronnax, a French </span>marine biologist<span> and narrator of the story, who happens to be in New York at the time, receives a last-minute invitation to join the expedition which he accepts.</span>
<span>It would cost excessively numerous American lives. Supporters of the nuclear bomb contended against the possibility that the US ought not utilize the bomb against Japan by taking note of that firebombing had just caused broad harm in Japan. The new Japanese constitution after World War II contained a condition that kept Japan from having or utilizing an armed force.</span>
: Ned was a navajos in the Code Talker and he tried to know about the world of white people, the language, but I don't think Ned understood how to speak English, so I think he preferred to become a code speaker. In the poem it says, before you speak, I catch the pattern of your silences, which means that he did not know the language of white people to learn about them but he was still successful in his work. For instance, Ned is a very knowledgeable Navajo Indian. He loves to study and, when he grows up, wants to be a teacher. Instead he is planning a battle. By the age of 16 Ned becomes a Sailor, and becomes a Code Talker.
Answer:
the slaughter of a great number of people, as in battle; butchery; massacre.
fighting or other violence:
brutal carnage on the football field.
great damage, utter defeat, or chaos:
We are charting a way forward after the Election Day carnage.
Archaic. dead bodies, as of those slain in battle.
Explanation: