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nydimaria [60]
3 years ago
5

14,, plz help plz plz plz 20 points

English
1 answer:
nirvana33 [79]3 years ago
6 0

Um I think its C???????

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Exercise 4 Draft a brief one-paragraph piece concerning the following theme. Be sure to incorporate a proper voice and style.
riadik2000 [5.3K]

Hello everyone it's been a while, I hope you all are well and good just like I am. My office work past months has been kind of hectic due to extra shifts that I have been working on, but it all was finally worth everything. Thus, I would like to share the amazing news with you all that I have been promoted plus been awarded with incentives due to my good work.

After working for a lot of late hours my body and mind is now completely exhausted, and I thought of a vacation spot that could help to lift my spirit up. Visiting Bali has been on my mind since a long time and I can't wait to explore the beautiful lands.

I would be coming back home after the vacations to meet you all, Until then take care of yourselves and I also will make sure to take care of myself as well.

To know more about Vacation spot refer to the link below

brainly.com/question/7905262

#SPJ4

6 0
1 year ago
Write a story illustrating:the saying “you reap what you sow”.
wariber [46]

Answer:

Once upon a time, there lived a man called Alhaji Ajase who had two wives named Alhaja Kudi and Alhaja Khadijat. Kudi, the first wife had only a son ten years after their wedding. Perhaps, that motivated t he man to marry another wife. The second wife had six children; three boys and three girls. The two wives lived a cat and dog life. The Alhaji was a wealthy man with fleet of cars, houses and industries. He was indeed a man of affluence.

Alhaja Khadijat who had six children hated not only the first wife but her only son. In a short while, she concluded arrangements to eliminate the first wife for no just cause, other than that she was jealous. She contacted a herbalist in their neighborhood to do her act. The herbalist requested for the first wife’s name a strand of her hair and her saliva. Khadijat got these before long without Kudi knowing. One day Kudi slept and died in her sleep. Khadijat was busy shedding crocodile tears; she wept for days, so much so that nobody ever suspected her as the killer of kudi.

After a year of Kudi’s death, she started maltreating Olubi, the only child of the deceased. The boy was only in primary for, but the wicked Khadijat made life unbearable for him. The boy became the family ‘house help’, but she hid this entirely from her husband as he would not take it kindly with her. This woman and her children took undue advantage of the death of Kudi to unleash terror on the ‘hopeless’ boy. He was denied comfort, food and other things of life despite his father’s riches. More often than not, Olubu was made to sleep in the pantry, where he had to battle with mice, mosquitoes and c**kroaches. Despite all these inhuman treatment meted out to him, he never fell sick for one day. Though, he was denied educational facilities by the step-mother, he always came first in all examinations.

It then came that Olubu and two children of Khadijat wrote National Common Entrance Examination. Despite thousands of Naira spent by the step-mother to aid her two children, it was only Olubu that passed in flying colours. In fact, he was awarded a scholarship as he came first in the examination in the entire country. the step-mother thought that the only masterstroke was to wickedly eliminate the body as she did to his mother, otherwise her own children would become his ‘errand boys and girls’ in future.

Alhaja Khadijat contacted the same herbalist who killed the boy’s mother to give her the same charms that killed his mother to kill him too, but the herbalist replied that the poison her had was not the same as the one of the past but it was equally effective. She got it and it was to be sprinkled on the boy’s food. She did it as she was told and travelled out of town so that nobody would suspect any foul play. She warned her six children secretly not to eat the poisoned food before she travelled out on her fake journey. At school, all the children were ordered to wait and do some manual labour, but Khadijat’s children being highly disobedient and wayward defined the order and went home. Olubu had no alternative, but to wait and complete the assignment before going home.

On getting home, Khadijat’s six children, at first, obeyed their mothers instruction not to eat the poisoned food. However, after finishing their own food and still not satisfied, they went ahead and ate out of the poisoned food reserved for Olubu. They quickly ate it and even fought each other in the process. Thereafter, t hey all entered their room and slept and all died in their sleep. Khadijat arrived from the market journey and met her six children dead instead of Olubu. Sh e cried, cried and cried and confessed that she did herself, that she killed Olubu’s mother out of jealousy and decided to kill her son too and that the whole exercise backfired. She was immediately reported to the king who asked the villagers to meet at the market square. Khadijat was sentenced to death by hanging. She pleaded for pardon but the people replied ‘you reap what you sow’. She was hanged at the market square.

7 0
3 years ago
What evidence could be used to support the authors claims in this excerpt? Select three options
bagirrra123 [75]

Answer:

A. tweets (Twitter messages) describing the overthrow of Ben Ali at the time it happened .

D. journal entries from a student describing how social media helped him join a protest .

E. quotations from experts on social media use during uprisings within the Arab world.

Explanation:

According to the given passage, the authors Heather Brown, Emily Guskin, and Amy Mitchell present a claim that the Arab Uprisings were projected in a much greater deal to the outside world with the help of social media. The presence of cell phones used to record the events, which also led to the increased interest and attention to citizen journalism.

So, to support the claims laid by them, there are some pieces of evidence that can be used. <u><em>Evidences back the claims, validating the truth of the claims made</em></u>. Such pieces of evidence that can help are <u>tweets that describe the overthrow of the ruler at the time it had happened </u>or a <u>student's journal entries that describe how social media helped people him to join the protest</u>. Also, the <u>use of quotations from experts on social media that are used during the uprising within the Arab world</u> can be used as evidence to support the claims.

Thus, the correct answers are A, D, and E.

5 0
3 years ago
Match the lines in the poem with the themes they represent.
Varvara68 [4.7K]

<u>Answer:</u>

There passed, as a shroud  

A fleecy cloud,  

And I turned away to thee, - The night is changeable

I gazed awhile.  

On her cold smile;  

Too cold—too cold for me— - Moonlight can be uninviting

And dearer thy beam shall be;  

For joy to my heart  

Is the proud part

Thou bearest in Heaven at night, - Stars evoke wonder

<u>Explanation:</u>

In this poem, <u>"Evening Star" by Edgar Allen Poe</u>, a fleecy cloud passing by the moon at night changes the view of the speaker. His gaze falters and he turns away from the "cold smile" of the moon to look at the evening star. This could represent how the night is changeable in its views, how things are constantly moving and changing- every slight passing of a cloud, variation in the moonlight, appearance of the stars, their positions, etc. It could also represent how the changing night changed the speaker's gaze.

The speaker doesn't connect to moon well and calls her smile "cold", "too cold," and despite it being brighter than the stars, calls her moonlight "pale" and "lowly." He describes the moon as residing among her "slaves"- the planets, and presents the moon in an image of coldness and arrogance. Hence, moonlight, for him, is uninviting.

The speaker's heart is filled with joy when he looks at the evening star. He says that the beam of the star is "dearer" to him even if it is so far away. His affection towards it is all the more because of the distance, despite which its light reaches him, and the significant part the star has in the night sky or the "Heaven," according to him. He admires and prefers its "distant fire." All this adds to the sense of how the stars evoke wonder by the virtue of their light, distance, position and personal significance to the speaker.

3 0
4 years ago
Complete the sentence.
pshichka [43]
The answer is C. Derives.
4 0
4 years ago
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