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irga5000 [103]
3 years ago
6

8. Find the complete predicate of the sentence below.

English
1 answer:
Snezhnost [94]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

A boy and his faithful dog <u>are good companions.</u>

Explanation:

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15. Which of the following statements shows the best expectations to have about the audience for your essay?
Greeley [361]

Answer:

Hey! The answer is D

Explanation:

Because most people don't know a lot if they are reading your topic!

3 0
2 years ago
Which of these issues was a major source of friction between Heathcliff and Catherine in Wuthering Heights? A) social divide B)
nadezda [96]

In general, it is "social divide"

That is a major source of friction between Heathcliff and Catherine in Wuthering Heights. This tension is only relieved later in the tale.

Explanation:

Heathcliff was a common boy who was fostered and never had peculiar schooling or protocol while she was always favoring towards partnering someone classy and educated. Unluckily for her, when he arrived back to the Heights that's specifically what he became so her life became much tougher.

3 0
3 years ago
How is Witchcraft in 1692 similar to terrorism today, according to Baker's argument?​
arsen [322]

Answer:

Emerson W. Baker’s book begins on a surprising note, with a discussion of an artifact in the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Mass. It is a small wooden chest, probably made in the 1670s for two Salem Quakers, Joseph and Bathsheba Pope. The Popes would play a role in the “storm of witchcraft” that broke out in Salem and neighboring towns in 1692. But most contemporary Friends probably will find their role surprising—Joseph and Bathsheba were not innocent victims of hysterical accusations of being witches. Instead they were accusers, adding their testimony to that which hanged, among others, the saintly Rebecca Nurse and John Procter, the central character of Arthur Miller’s drama The Crucible.

The events in and around Salem in 1692 are among the most studied in U.S. history. Baker, an historian at Salem State University, is concerned both with explaining what happened and why. At the center were girls and young women who lived not in the town of Salem proper, but the adjacent community of Salem Farms or Salem Village. The village was convulsed by conflicts between families over land, inheritance, and leadership—the village church had gone through four ministers in 20 years. The accusers claimed that witches and wizards not only tormented them, but also had been responsible for murders and other crimes over the decades. Their targets ranged from those who fit the classic stereotypes of witches—unpopular, marginalized women—to ministers, military leaders, and politicians and their wives. By the fall of 1692, 19 women and men had been convicted and hanged, and several others had died in prison or in the throes of the legal process.

Baker’s greatest contribution to the ongoing discussion of the events of 1692 is his analysis of the judges who presided over the trials and who were responsible for the sentences. They represented the colony’s elite. In 1692, Baker argues, they had something to prove. Most were men who had been educated for the Puritan ministry, but had instead taken up secular careers. Most had held office under the unpopular government of King James II that was overthrown in 1688–1689. Several faced suspicions about the depth of their religious experiences. They had also suffered significant losses from Indian raids on lands they held in Maine. Before 1692, witchcraft trials in Massachusetts were as likely to result in acquittals as convictions. But in 1692, Baker concludes, the judges were “looking for someone to blame.” They found targets in the men and women who came before them.

Quakers are not central to Baker’s account, but they do appear from time to time. No Friends were accused of witchcraft, although a number of the accused had ties to Quaker families. One of Baker’s heroes is Thomas Maule, a Salem Friend who in 1695 published a ferocious denunciation of the trials. Maule, fittingly, would be the ancestor of a long line of Friends who would continue to be argumentative until the twentieth century.

Baker concludes with what he sees as a moral. In 1692, Puritans in Massachusetts were convinced that Satan had “visited their colony and struck a severe blow.” But while at the beginning they saw him as acting through witches, by the end of the year “they came to understand that Satan’s great work had been to delude them into thinking that many devout Puritans and good people were witches.” He warns us today: “change the word witch to terrorist and we can perhaps better appreciate the complexity of the problem that the people of Salem . . . faced in 1692.”

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
Select all the correct answers.
garri49 [273]

The right option is B.

Explanation:

When writing a paper, it is important to cite sources correctly to give credit to the original authors, otherwise, it would be a case of plagiarism.

Plagiarism is the use of someone else's work without giving them the proper credit. In other words, authors are protected by intellectual property rights, for which plagiarism is an unethical practice.

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What would the teacher most likely say to Ren about his listening skills? Don’t take notes while the other person is speaking. D
GenaCL600 [577]

Answer:

Don't look down the entire time the other person is speaking.

Explanation:

5 0
2 years ago
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