Haymitch’s last advice is to start running at the sound of the gong, to ignore the Cornucopia and put as much distance as possible between themselves and the other tributes, and to find water.
Pseudo-listening.<span> The intent of </span>pseudo-listening<span> is not to </span>listen<span>, but to cater to some other personal need of the listener.</span>
Answer:
She should look it up in the Dictionary of Technical Terms
Explanation:
As the word "column" can have various meanings, depending on the field where the word will be used, one should always check if the meaning he thinks he knows is the correct one.
In typography, a word column has a completely different meaning than in the engineering: a vertical division of a page or text.
Answer:
C. I'll spare you my woes and worries. May my burdens breathe better tomorrow.
Explanation:
Remember that alliteration refers to a stylistic device in which some words have the same first consonant sound and are close together in a series. As I said, the one that determines if there is alliteration or not, is the sound, not the letters. The sound is the one that must repeat at the beggining of the words. In this case <em>woes </em>and <em>worries </em>have the same first consonant sound, <em>may </em>and <em>my </em>also do.
It normally means charm or enjoyment or in the case of food something used to add flavor (usually refers to lemon zest or orange zest which comes from shaving the peel off of the fruit)