The negative trait of Armida that irritated her friend was possessiveness, as shown in option B in the first question. The lesson Armida learned from the chicks was that if a chick is held too tightly, he will fight, as shown in option D.
<h3>What happened to Armida?</h3>
- She took friendship very seriously.
- She was possessive of her friend.
- She didn't allow her friend to have other interests.
Armida proved to be a very suffocating friend. She was possessive of her friend and wanted that friend to always live up to what she wanted. This caused her friend to move away, which made her very sad.
When playing with chicks, she understood that if she holds a chick too tightly, the chick will pull away from her, just as she did with her friend.
More information about friendships at the link:
brainly.com/question/26627248
Answer:
Don"t write to your parents?
Explanation:
"None of the above" is the one that correctly describes the speaker <span>of Theodore Roethke's "An Elegy for Jane (My student, thrown by a horse)" </span>among the following choices given in the question The correct option among all the options that are given in the question is the fourth option or option "D".
Answer:
A claim must be arguable but stated as a fact. It must be debatable with inquiry and evidence; it is not a personal opinion or feeling.
A claim defines your writing's goals, direction, and scope.
A good claim is specific and asserts a focused argument.
Answer:
There are many interesting jobs that surprisingly exist. Brain surgery is one of them. I think that people who do brain surgeries are psychopaths because I can't imagine opening a brain myself. This job is both interesting and dangerous because if the doctor touches the wrong part of the brain, the patient will intinctly die. The human brain looks like your intestines, a pinkish jelly-like substance it's VERY sensitive. I wonder how did scientists discovered how the human brain works. How could a insignificant creature learn all by itself how it's brain works? If we could learn about our brain, then why do other animals can't? How did we discover cells? How did we create technology? This is when I start thinking, Do aliens exist? I have done unstoppable research about how did humans discovered or created technology. I have found absolutely nothing that says about that. But I do now know, that the Egyptians had drawings of aliens in their pyramids. So I now think, Did aliens gave us technology?