To safe lifes
hope this helpss
Answer:
Dear mom and Dad,
My friend is so caring. My friend is the smartest person I know. My friend is always there for me and I do not know what I would do without my friend. I hope you guys like my friend because she is so excited to meet you guys. She is my best friend and I want you to like who I like as well. Friends are what make life worth while (You know, besides family). Anyways, my friend always know how to cheer me up when I’m feeling down. She/he is my better half. So, what do you think of my friend?
Sincerely,
Your name
Explanation:
I do not know your friend but that is an example of what you could say to your parents about your friend, replacing the word friend with your friends actual name.
Answer:
A The author uses loaded language when he says, “Some of the things we're throwing away are poisoning the Earth and will eventually poison all of us and all living things,”
Explanation:
According to the excerpt from America the Not-So-Beautiful by Andrew A. Rooney, the author talks about the dangers of improperly disposing waste. He tries to convince Americans that they should dispose of their waste properly.
The author uses loaded language to convey his point of view about throwing things away by saying that Americans are "wasteful and we don't want to fix anything, so if something is broken we will just buy a new one". He also says that some of the things "we're throwing away are poisoning the Earth and will eventually poison all of us and all living things".
Loaded language is a type of rhetoric that is used to have an impact on an audience by triggering an emotional response by using strong words or phrases.
Borges's story The Garden of Forking Paths can be considered to be a three dimensional chess game for a variety of reasons. First, like a game of chess, a nearly infinite number of possible outcomes are proposed through the story (just as how a chess game can allow for a variety of different outcomes). Also, chess is a game of choice, just as the Garden of Forking Paths - both the story itself and the novel of the same titles mentioned in the story - allows for the reader to, in essence, choose their own design and strategy. Furthermore, the lead character\protagonist in the story is manipulating events throughout the story to, in essence, score a "checkmate."