What task are you talking about, I don't see anything?
Answer:
B
Explanation:
The main idea is to present the feelings the person had before amazon became what it is today. I had my own misgivings about ordering on line until I realized that I really had no choice. I live in a small community of about 800 people. There is a Walmart in the next town over (which has a population of 5000), but I'm not fond of what they did to small businesses.
So the choice was shop at a place I don't like or order through the mail. I didn't really make up my mind until about 2 years ago. Then it was fine.
The author of what you quoted had many of the same feelings. It's a gamble putting money where the system can be broken into and that is what this is all about -- fear of trying something you don't trust.
The answer is B, I think
Based on the phrases, this is the correct order of how David was able to teach English in Spain.
.
A. David took some elective courses in creative writing and linguistics while he was in high school
<span>B. David put in four hours of study each day to earn straight As throughout high school. </span>
C. David received his Bachelor of Arts degree in education with a minor in Spanish.
<span> D. </span><span>David completed his Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) Master's program</span>
<span>E .David applied for a teaching program that allowed him to teach English to Spanish speakers in the United States</span>.
F. David was selected for a teaching program in his school and was sent to teach English in Spain.
I think David had a background about English when he was in High school. He was able to practice it by writing. Both A and B happened in his high school years, that is why they are ranked a and b. Then the rest would most probably happen after high school
<span> </span>
Answer:
Explanation:
2. Problem: My mom locked her keys in the car
Solution: get a temporary key or call road assistance
3. Problem: I broke my favorite toy.
Solution: ask a toy maker to fix it
Answer:
James Thurber uses many made-up words in "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty," but only two or three seem to qualify as examples of onomatopoeia, which is the creation of words that imitate natural sounds.
Explanation:
The pocketa-pocketa-pocketa sound increases because Mitty is unconsciously pressing harder on the accelerator.