Yes, because learning how to spell, for example, could help you later write letters, or get a job. Learning math may help you get a better job. So learning does have a positive impact on someone's life. :)
P.S. Will you mark me brainliest if I'm right?
Answer:
infinitives: Jack likes <em><u>to eat</u></em> pizza, <em><u>to play</u></em> football, and <u><em>to read</em></u> comics.
gerunds: Jack likes <u><em>eating</em></u> pizza, <u>playing</u> football, and <u>reading</u> comics.
nouns: Jack likes <u><em>pizza</em></u>, <em><u>football</u></em>, and <em><u>comics</u></em>.
Explanation:
One good option is tetrameter.
This question seems to be incomplete. However, there is enough information to find the right answer.
Answer: Pearl notices that the scarlet letter on her mother's bosom has paved the way for lack of sunshine in her mother´s lie.
Explanation:
The question refers to The Scarlet Letter: A Romance (1850), by Nathaniel Hawthorne.
In the provided excerpt, Pearl notices that the sun seems to dislike her mother because of the scarlet letter on her bosom. Pearls comment about how that doesn´t happen to her because she doesn't have the scarlet letter yet implies that she thinks she will when she grows up to be an adult woman.
This means that she doesn´t think that the scarlet letter is unique to her mother, but something she will also get when she grows up. And she doesn´t admire her mother for it, as she dislikes how the sun runs away from her.
Pearl´s words imply that she, who is usually aware of things that others can´t see, has realized that the lack of sunshine in her mother’s life is caused by the scarlet letter on her bosom.
Brutus is a tragic hero as his judgement of error in killing Caesar leads to his downfall but he is an inherently good man.
Explanation:
Brutus is an enigmatic character in the play as he joins the conspiracy and drags the dagger into the heart of Caesar yet he has love for him and torments himself for doing it.
He does not kill Caesar eventually because he hates him, he mentions repeatedly that he likes him and thinks of him as a great man and as a friend .
He does so because he thinks this is what will be good for Rome and as a patriot it is his responsibility to do this for the nation.
He torments himself for the act and realizes eventually that it has done more harm than good, making him die in the end as his fall is tragic and follows the classical principles.