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katovenus [111]
3 years ago
7

11. The presentation was

English
1 answer:
s344n2d4d5 [400]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

Compound

Explanation:

I can take out so and replace the coma with a . and they would both be a sentence full.

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The camp is filled with Webelos this week,
Nezavi [6.7K]

Answer:

يا امير المؤمنين علي بن ابي طالب رضي الله عنه،

قال أمير المؤمنين علي بن ابي طالب رضي الله عنه ولا تقربو زينا!

8 0
4 years ago
How does Abraham change in the story? A.He was afraid of performing, then overcomes his anxiety. B.He was afraid to swim, then d
andrey2020 [161]

Answer:

D.He was trained as a performer, then escapes into the wild

Explanation:

Abraham was a 12 year old elephant. He was used as a circus animal. During this time he had learnt tricks such as walking on rubber balls, juggling etc.

But I e thing he couldn't learn was how to swim. Which made his owner really angry. The story progressed to where Abraham was able to unlock his cage, although not intentionally. He was looking for hay and the cage was not really locked. This caused him to fall into water, which carried him till he got to land.

This was how he escaped into the wild from where he met other elephants and soon had his own family.

5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What is the term for a story within a story?
puteri [66]
Anecdote, the term is anecdote but it's I little bit different, probably should work if you use it anyways.
7 0
4 years ago
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Please Help!! Growing up a Slave and FD Ch. 3-5
professor190 [17]

1. The slaves were punished very severely for no reason. They were paranoid because they were unaware of what can happen next and how badly can they get injured by the masters. They did not speak ill of the masters because if by any means, the master gets a hint of any ill words about himself, he would drag the slave, whip him or resell him for just expressing the thoughts.

Douglass illustrates the example of a slave who, when asked about how his master treated him, told the truth. Not knowing Colonel Lloyd’s face, he tells the man he is treated very badly. This upsets Lloyd and a few weeks later, the same slave is chained and sold to a broker in Georgia for the “offense." Douglass elaborates that this was the situation of the slaves who spoke the truth.

Further, the fear of suffering was content in the minds of the slaves that they always spoke well of their master. Some of the slaves were in real prejudice and acted competitively about each other masters.  

2. Mr. Gore is proud, driven, tricky, and pitiless, and his control over the slaves is savage. He doesn't contend or hear dissents and mostly looks for any opportunity to rebuff the slaves. He guarantees that the majority of the slaves bow down to him, in the same way as he does for the Colonel. Mr. Gore is a quiet man, never clowning as a few managers would. He performs uncouth deeds of discipline with a cool air.  

At some point, Mr. Austin whips one slave. Demby. He runs to a pit to hide and calm the pain. Demby declines to leave the brook, and Mr. Gore gives Demby a count of three, after which he instantly shoots the slave. At the point when examined concerning his activities, Mr. Austin composedly clarifies that Demby was setting a terrible example in front of other slaves. Mr. Gore is never researched for this murder, and lives free.  

This is the ironic part of the character which exemplifies the incongruity that Mr. Gore is regarded for his ability as a “first-rate overseer.”

3.Douglass considers his travel to Baltimore an endowment of the condition. On the off chance that he had not been expelled from Colonel Lloyd's ranch around then, Douglass trusts he would at present be a slave, as opposed to a man sitting openly in his house composing his life account. Douglass understands that he may seem superstitious or self‑centered to assume that stipulation contributed to his conveyance to Baltimore, however, the inclination is as yet solid. From his most early memory, Douglass detected that he would not be a slave for eternity. This sense gave him trust in tough occasions, and he thinks of it as a blessing from God.


8 0
3 years ago
Select the guiding questions of Historical Criticism
svetoff [14.1K]
Sorry can’t see the answers
7 0
4 years ago
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