Okay. Say you can bake a cake. Say you can ride a bike. You can make a paper airplane. A cootie-catcher. Anything, you can make anything. What you would have to do it tell how you make it, and from the words below, choose a word/adjective that describes how you make it, whether it be how it looks, sounds, tastes, or feels.
Say I can bake muffins : first I would preheat the oven, beat the butter and sugar, mix it all together, lather it into muffins cups, and so on. I would put it in the oven, and wait for it. Once I would eat it, or anything, I would say that the muffins are fresh out of the oven. They are smooth to my touch. They taste sweet in my mouth. And say I overheated this muffin to burned crisps. They would taste and feel hard.
<span>The correct answer is, she herself feels differently with each passing moment.
Because it says that </span><span> I am feeling differently every moment, & shall not be able to suggest a single thing that can assist your Mind. That indicates that she feels different at each passing moment.</span>
Do you mean what is Danah Boyd's claim? And is "Blame Society Not The Screen" the title of the passage?
I believe that people are drawn to fiction because it is an escape for then its a different reality that they can go to, to escape the real one like Harry Potter, Star Wars, and The Hobbit they are all fictional and people can use them to escape this reality to a better one in their mind.
Antony's speech is a turning point for the conspirators. Caesar has been murdered, and the conspirators have explained the situation. Although Antony does not openly disagree with them, we see that he believes the act was wrong when he adresses the crowd. Brutus has already talked to the people, and he argued that Caesar was killed out of love for Rome. Antony, however, turns the crowd against them. He reminds the people of everything that Caesar did for Rome. By carefully presenting his arguments, he succeeds in turning the crowd against the conspirators.