The correct answer of the given question above would be the third option. What the main idea does not do is to show what a reader will learn, rather, it only shows what the story is about, summarizes the details and events, and illustrates an important idea. Hope this answers your question.
The last one. The last answer choice and the excerpt from the passage display someone's abilities being overlooked because of gender.
Our world would be different because without the printing press we would have no books, so school would be different and probably more difficult. Without the printing press we never would have printed bibles so church and any religious studies would be different (and probably more difficult) AND of course we would have no newspapers so there would be less advertising, and nothing to read on Sunday morning.
Answer:
2. prepare for experiments
4. take notes about how the experiment went
Explanation:
Because that's the way my school does it.
Happiness is a state of mind is NOT a theme of The Crucible.
Option C
<u>Explanation: </u>
There are various themes in the great story Crucible written by Arthur Miller. This story resembles the honest opinions about human beings. Their true and hard nature has been revealed in the themes of The Crucible.
The major themes of the Crucible are respect and reputation, hysteria, supernatural powers, justice and pride, Religion, jealousy among humans, Good versus Evil, Lies, and dishonesty, etc. The story hasn’t covered anything related to happiness is the state of the mind.