The statement "doing less is an ideal that we should embrace" may have been adopted by some people who have been successful in their choices. However, these people are rare cases, it is not easy and recurring to be successful and reach your goals in establishing a path of dedication and effort. Doing less does not guarantee that we will succeed, we must always seek, learn and fight for what we want.
We can use as an example the success story of Bill Gates, where this statement does not fit. We can find several testimonials about how Gates and his team worked (sometimes exhaustively) to establish the success of his company.
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The counter argument is convincing in that it brings a concrete example of someone who worked to get what he has, as well as presenting arguments that can be identifiable with the present day.
Hello Chandranewlon!
A source card is made during research to tell the facts about the source one is using.
Hope this'll help you out! :)
Answer:
1. sister and I as subject and shopped as verb put u in the space before sentence.
2. chinese is the subject display and sell are the verbs
3. Beijing and Shanghai as subjects attract as a verb
4.Farmers as subject and buy and sell as verb
5. shop as subject and compare as verb
6. you and I as subject and buy as verb
7. Tamala as subject and wanted as verb
8. Eric and I as subject and looked and bought as verb
9. Some stores as subject and wrap and mail as verb
10. my uncle or I as subject and call and make as verb
Explanation:
<span>In 'I, Too' by Langston Hughes, the speaker refers to 'they' frequently throughout to indication a polarisation between himself and wider 'America', the America that he, too, is a part of. In the last instance of this in the poem, the line is 'They'll see how beautiful I am/And be ashamed-' which implies that the bias held by wider America against him exists only because 'they' have not yet seen him for what he truly is.</span>