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WINSTONCH [101]
3 years ago
10

Should 14 year old's have jobs, why or why not?

English
1 answer:
PolarNik [594]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Yes 14 year olds should have jobs.

Explanation:

I think 14 year olds should have jobs because it will teach them about life at a young age. It also teaches them how to be responsible.

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How does Elie Wiesel determine what is right and how people should act in the speech
Vedmedyk [2.9K]

IMO he determines what's right and how people should act in the speech by talking about how dark slavery is and how nobody should be treated like an animal. I hope this helps.

7 0
4 years ago
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elena-14-01-66 [18.8K]

Answer:

Yes

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
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Jonas and The Giver discuss what would happen if Jonas were to become lost or get into an accident now that he has almost a year
solniwko [45]

Answer:

The Giver tells Jonas this because he is thinking that maybe it would be a good idea for the whole community to have memories again, and that he could help them cope with them.

Explanation:

When The Giver tells Jonas the story of Rosemary, he tells him that when she asked for her release, all the memories she had absorbed for 5 weeks returned directly to the community all at once. This caused great chaos, and with the pain that The Giver felt and the anger, he did not want to help them.

Now, he is deep in his thoughts because if something happened to Jonas, the memories of a whole year would pass directly to the minds of each person in the community. This could be a big problem, but what if The Giver helped them this time?

It's a considerable option, and that's why he tells Jonas that they can talk more about it sometime and that he needs to think about it some more.

4 0
3 years ago
What your favorite color?
abruzzese [7]

*What's

And mine is green, how about you? :)

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2 years ago
In the excerpt from 20,000 leagues under the sea, how does the narrator show knowledge of ancient Greek culture
lilavasa [31]

Sure, Captain Nemo may be the man behind the Nautilus and our undersea tour guide extraordinaire. But <span>20,000 Leagues Under the Sea </span>isn't his book. No, 20,000 Leagues is, for better and for worse, pure Pierre Aronnax.

At the end of the novel, after he, Conseil, and Ned wash up on the coasts of Norway, Aronnax tells us he is not "revising the tale of these adventures" (2.23.3). He continues:

<span>Not a single fact has been omitted, not the slightest detail exaggerated. It is the faithful narration of an incredible expedition. </span>(2.23.3)

The thing is, when authors tell you that their work is totally, completely, 100% true, well… it's usually best not to believe them.

Yes, the scientist in Aronnax definitely believes he's being "faithful" to the truth. But think about it this way: Aronnax is so dazzled by Nemo, so befuddled by the <span>Nautilus, </span>and so frightened by his circumstances, that he doesn't fully understand Nemo's true nature until the very end of the book. Like, way after you already knew what was up, to be sure.

Aronnax wonders about Nemo's motives and origins throughout<span> the entire book</span>. But it's only in the final couple chapters, once the good captain has actually destroyed a ship right in front of his eyes, that Aronnax fully recognizes his host's capacity for violence.

If Verne didn't force us to learn about the characters' adventures through Aronnax's limited vision, "the message" of the book might have been very different. Aronnax's susceptibility to Nemo's charms mirrors our general human fallibility for questionably evil people's outer shininess.

Like many well-spoken, but terrifyingly violent military leaders throughout history, Nemo is able to keep Aronnax under his thumb for most of this book.

6 0
3 years ago
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