1.It will help me perpare for the future I have ahead of me.
2.It's beautiful and it never hurt to see and learn new things.
3.It says you should exercise and eat healthy things every day.
4.Life is short and since an average human life lives for 80years you don't have much time in your life so you shouldn't waste it like your loved ones you shouldn't be playing video games all day. Go outside enjoy your life because you never know what might happen.
5.NASA is the most popular space team and they have missions with awesome tools and they get to see the great beyood.
6.The research is very useful for a good use of life and use it correctly and not waste it.
7. You should always help yourself with something that is bothering you.
8.The past can teach us about what's going to happen in the future and people coming from the past are great role models.
9.Other living things are also really important like humans plants can help farmers and bears can find honey 3x faster than humans.
10.It helps you prepare for your own future and help you see what it's going to be like.
I would say A, simple listing. It's not going in order of time, because they aren't dated in any way. I wouldn't say it was a cause and effect because you are just explaining each verbal form. It doesn't seem to have to be in that particular order, it's just how it's placed. You aren't comparing anything, and you none of them seem to be less important then the other. So I believe the answer would be A.
Answer:
read
Explanation:
you eat food, you read a book
Wolves is one. typically when the singular version ends with an F
Answer:
The fear of appearing foolish to the Burmese causes him to kill the elephant.
Explanation:
The narrator believes the elephant is valuable, almost like a "huge and costly piece of machinery." He realizes that soon the animal will calm down and won't be dangerous anymore. He does not want to kill the elephant, but the natives are excited to see the beast shot. And so the narrator realizes that he is now compelled to shoot the elephant. At the end of the story, Orwell wonders if any of his comrades understood that he killed the elephant “solely to avoid looking a fool.”