the flag of the u.s means our freedom so does united we stand divided we fall of u burn the flag its disrespect of our freedom like our freedom of speech
Answer:
hiiii thheeeeee i like when three smile at meeeee
Explanation:
We may take the winds helping out Gilgamesh's as his "teammates". However, these winds did not come naturally but were thrown in at Humbaba, which sounds like some sort of supernatural control of weather of which Gilgamesh takes advantage to defeat his foe. We can state that Gilgamesh relies on supernatural forces because he leaped upon Humbaba as he saw him pinned down to ground by the action of winds.
Answer:
When you see the term full text in a research database it means you should be able to get the entire article immediately within the database you are using. ... The database you are using may only provide information such as the citation, abstract, and keywords, but that doesn't mean the full text article is not available.
Explanation:
Please mark my answer as brainliest. I need to rank up.
Answer:
After reading the passage, I see how the author uses connotations and figurative language to make his experience come to life. The author uses a mix of postive and negitive connotations like "fast" as a positive connotation, and "lighting" as a negitive connotation. Though the author is using negitive connotation in the paragraph, the story itself is not meant to be negitive, rather exciting and uses figurtative language as a description. This is expressed through the phrases like, "electric fight" but the author hints at what they mean through the following context clues like, " for us to turn on and off as we please." Which indicated a light swich, and the electric that "fighting" through it. This make it feel like not just a light swich or power, but an electric storm that comes to life!