Answer: Skiing Vs. Snowboarding for Beginners. “Skiing is easier to learn but harder to master - where as snowboarding is harder to learn but easier to master.” ... With skiing, a beginner's technique can be broken down into a modular approach but its perfection will require you to become extremely technical.
Explanation:
B) Boxer supports the cause of Animal Farm; Benjamin does not.
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Answer & Explanation:
Chapter 8 'Scoring the Republic' from 'Give Me Liberty' consists about - rise of political parties.
1789 : New York was the capital, George Washington was the 1st president. American leaders were apprehensive of organised political parties, probable of being divisive & disloyal.
Hamilton Plan, covering financial plan by secretary of treasury, experienced first political division. Jeferson & Southerners opposed this plan.
Thereafter French Revolution & Political Press led to foundation of two prominent political parties. The two prominent political parties were Federalists & Republicans.
Federalists supported strong central government, led by Washington, Hamilton. Republicans supported strict interpretation of constitution.
Answer:
C)"In an instant all my trepidation was turned into unutterable bliss; and I most reverently bowed myself with gratitude"
Explanation:
According to the first question, Olaudah Equiano felt dejected as he describes that his sunk sunk within but his attitude changes later on.
The quotation that shows that the narrator Olaudah has moved beyond his what he felt earlier is option C.
This is because, it is described that any sense of trepidation he felt was changed to instant bliss and for that he was grateful.
The Wife of Bath begins her description of her two “bad” husbands. Her fourth husband, whom she married when still young, was a reveler, and he had a “paramour,” or mistress (454). Remembering her wild youth, she becomes wistful as she describes the dancing and singing in which she and her fourth husband used to indulge. Her nostalgia reminds her of how old she has become, but she says that she pays her loss of beauty no mind. She will try to be merry, for, though she has lost her “flour,” she will try to sell the “bran” that remains. Realizing that she has digressed, she returns to the story of her fourth husband. She confesses that she was his purgatory on Earth, always trying to make him jealous. He died while she was on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem.