<u>Amber </u><u>is </u><u>conducting</u><u> </u><u>research</u><u> </u><u>for </u><u>a </u><u>presentation</u><u> </u><u>about </u><u>the </u><u>first </u><u>perso</u><u>n </u><u>from </u><u>the </u><u>United </u><u>State </u><u>to </u><u>travel </u><u>to </u><u>space.</u>
Which source will most likely provide relevant information?

- A newspaper from last week.❌
- A travel magazine ❌
- An article about living in space❌
- An encyclopaedia✔️

I guess, That an encyclopaedia is the correct answer. As encyclopaedia can give a lot of more relevant information about the topic.
<h3>Hope it's helpful to you :)</h3>
There are four major types of conflict in a story: character versus self, character versus character, character versus society, and character versus nature. In this story, one might argue that the main conflict exists between Della Dillingham and herself (character vs. self) because she agonizes over what to get for her husband, Jim, for Christmas, as well as how to pay for it. She's only been able to save $1.87, and she is heartbroken that she will not be able to get him the kind of gift she feels he deserves: something of which he can be proud. Della wrestles a bit with herself, hence the conflict, eventually deciding to sell her hair in order to have enough money for such a gift.
One might also argue that the main conflict takes place between Della and Jim (character vs. character). Remember that conflict doesn't necessarily mean that one side is good, a hero, and one side is evil, a villain. To be an antagonist in literature means that one is an opposing force, an instrument of plot development, and perhaps an agent of change on the part of the protagonist. In the end, both Della and Jim have sold their most prized possessions in order to purchase something nice for the other, and those sales have rendered the gifts they receive essentially unusable.
D) Both the poem and the essay would be appropriate to include.
When trying to persuade readers, it is best to use as many rhetorical devices as possible. The rhetorical devices are ethos, pathos, and logos. Ethos is an appeal to ethics. Pathos is an appeal to emotion. And, logos is an appeal to logic. Thus, by including a poem, most likely, pathos will be included because of how poetry is emotional. Additionally, by including facts that support your ethical position of ending child labor, readers’ logical next step would be to support ending it, as well. That said, both the poem and essay would be appropriate to include.
To turn a verb into past tense usually have "ed" at the end
ex: she was laughing
past tense: she laughed
future: she will laugh