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love history [14]
3 years ago
15

I’ll give your 25 points if you write me couple of sentence of what to write/say about animals. Like.... relate to them...

English
2 answers:
Ket [755]3 years ago
7 0

Answer: An animal is a living organism in which it consumes organic matter. Animals will adapt to their surroundings better than most other organisms and are often found in the wild. They can be domesticated and used as pets, or taken in by zoos and other sanctuaries to be taken care of if need be. They are often highly intelligent beings and some produce matter that can be used for human benefit.

Please mark Brainliest if you like it! Have a blessed day/night! <3

kifflom [539]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

if you mean to explain what is alike between humans and animals then I can give you a few sentences

Explanation:

We are like animals because we all need at least 50 percent but the amount of water percentage needed declines over time.

Another way we are like animals is because biological we are animals. We are not like the kind of animal of a dog but we are classified as animals.

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What do “Tepeyac” and “Marian Anderson: Famous Concert Singer” have in common?
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I just took the test and I got it right. The answer is c. they both tell about someone important to the author.
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The answer is:  B. person versus nature.

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Analyze “houses and rooms are full of perfumes”
viktelen [127]

In this section, Whitman breaks out of enclosures, whether they be physical enclosures or mental ones. In one of his early notebooks, Whitman had drafted the line “Literature is full of perfumes,” a recognition that books and philosophies and religions all offer filtered versions of how to view the world. They are all “intoxicating”—alluring, to be sure, but also toxic. We are always tempted to live our lives according to the views of those who came before us, but Whitman urges us to escape such enclosures, open up the senses fully, and breathe the undistilled atmosphere itself. It is in this literal act of breathing that we gain our “inspiration,” the actual breathing in of the world. In this section, Whitman records the physicality of singing, of speaking a poem: a poem, he reminds us, does not derive from the mind or the soul but from the body. Our inspiration comes from our respiration, and the poem is “the smoke of my own breath,” the breathing of the atoms of the air back out into the world again as song. Poems are written, Whitman indicates here, with the lungs and the heart and the hands and the genitals—with the air oxygenating our blood in the lungs and pumping it to our brain and every part of our body. We write (just as we read) with our bodies as much as our minds.

The poet in this section allows the world to be in naked contact with him, until he can feel at one with what before had been separate—the roots and vines now seem part of the same erotic flow that he feels in his own naked body (“love-root, silk-thread, crotch and vine”), and he is aware of contact and exchange, as he breathes the world in only to breathe it back again as an undistilled poem. All the senses are evoked here—smell (“sniff of green leaves”), hearing (“The sound of the belch’d words of my voice”), touch (“A few light kisses”), sight (“The play of shine and shade”), taste (“The smoke of my own breath,” that “smoke” the sign of a newly found fire within).

Now Whitman gently mocks those who feel they have mastered the arts of reading and interpretation. As we read this poem, Whitman wonders if we have “felt so proud to get at the meaning of poems,” and he invites us now to spend a “day and night” with him as we read “Song of Myself,” a poem that does not hide its meanings and require occult hermeneutics to understand it. Rather, he offers up his poem as one that emerges from the undistilled and unfiltered sources of nature, the words “belch’d” (uttered, cried out, violently ejected, bellowed) instead of manicured and shaped. This is a poem, Whitman suggests, that does not want to become a guide or a “creed,” but one that wants to make you experience the world with your own eyes. We take in this poet’s words, and then “filter them” from our selves, just like we do with the atmosphere and all the floating, mingling atoms of the world.

–EF

Can you please mark as brainliest?

6 0
3 years ago
Does anyone know this?
svet-max [94.6K]
The highlighted phrase says "through their own spectacles", which means that the answer must be the third option as it is the only one including the whale's point of view.

I hope this helps!
3 0
3 years ago
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