Answer:
The correct answer is B. Pensively.
Explanation:
The question refers to the relationship between two words with a similar meaning, where "accidentally" is related to "carelessly", since every accident is produced by lack of care, with which the accidental arises from carelessness.
Thus, the word "thoughtfully" is directly related to "pensively", insofar as they refer both to action through reflection and evaluative thinking of the decisions to be made by the person.
 
        
             
        
        
        
1. c
2. d
3. c
3A. ? second paragraph explains wood & animal skin are used
4. b
        
             
        
        
        
The human eye is a wonderful instrument, relying on refraction and lenses to form images. There are many similarities between the human eye and a camera, including:
a diaphragm to control the amount of light that gets through to the lens. This is the shutter in a camera, and the pupil, at the center of the iris, in the human eye.
a lens to focus the light and create an image. The image is real and inverted.
a method of sensing the image. In a camera, film is used to record the image; in the eye, the image is focused on the retina, and a system of rods and cones is the front end of an image-processing system that converts the image to electrical impulses and sends the information along the optic nerve to the brain.
The way the eye focuses light is interesting, because most of the refraction that takes place is not done by the lens itself, but by the aqueous humor, a liquid on top of the lens. Light is refracted when it comes into the eye by this liquid, refracted a little more by the lens, and then a bit more by the vitreous humor, the jelly-like substance that fills the space between the lens and the retina.
The lens is critical in forming a sharp image, however; this is one of the most amazing features of the human eye, that it can adjust so quickly when focusing objects at different distances.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Are you In class right now
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
A theme within <em>A Raisin In The Sun</em> is dreams
Explanation:
A Raisin in the Sun is named from a 1951 Langston Hughes poem titled Montage of a Dream Deferred, and dreams play an important role in the play. "What happens to a dream deferred?" the poet wonders in the poem, which also acts as the play's epigraph (a citation at the beginning of a book that elaborates on its primary themes). thinking about whether it will shrivel up "like a raisin in the sun" or erupt. The linked and competing desires of the Youngers drive the storyline of Hansberry's play, which is based on Hughes' unanswered question. Each character has their own goals that have been put on hold owing to the family's socioeconomic limits imposed by bigotry. Despite the conclusion's forecast of future challenges for the Clybourne Park family, the endurance of these ambitions gives the play a pervading feeling of hope. The drama is around Mama and her late husband Big Walter's goal of acquiring a home. Mama recalls Big Walter's comment that it appears "like God didn't see fit to give the black man nothing but dreams," tying the postponement of her dream to racial inequity, as she clings to a dream she hasn't had for over 35 years. Ironically, it is Big Walter's death, and the $10,000 insurance money that follows, that allows Mama to realize her ambition at the end of the play. Ruth, like Mama, clings to the idea of owning a house, which causes friction with her husband, Walter Lee, who aspires to be a self-sufficient company owner. Walter's ambition to operate a liquor shop (one of the few economic opportunities available to an African-American male in mid-century Chicago) contrasts sharply with his sister Beneatha's ambition to become a doctor. However, by the end of the play, Walter's squandered investment has jeopardized both his and Beneatha's aspirations, putting a pall over the play's semi-optimistic climax, which focuses on Mama's realized dream. With the insurance money gone, Walter and Beneatha's future plans look to be in jeopardy, evoking bigger fights with socioeconomic forces beyond the individuals' control.