Explanation:
Being young is overrated. Being old is underrated. Being in the middle is middle-rated. The only reason people don't pass smoothly—with acceptance, dignity, and age-appproriate rewards and responsibilities—from one stage to the next is because modern societies don't value humans. They value images and synthetic versions of how people should behave and act and buy—created by the diseased reality-distortion field of the media. All people are seen as throwaway, and once they reach a certain age, they have little value. Wisdom is for naught. And even youth is nothing unless bartered in some way in a marketplace of masks and images. All people are victims of this, at least until they see it and resist. Resist being made and seen as a cartoon of a human. You are fully human and just right for your age and perfect for who you are at every moment all the time throughout your life.
Answer:
I carefully prepared a homemade pizza crust and put on it the very freshest and tasty ingredients.
Explanation:
Why? The adverb, as it says, modifies the verb.
A lot of times, not all the time, they end in -ly
- In the first one "<em>most</em>" does nothing and the sentence doesn't seem to even have a verb. (to run, to walk, etc)
- In the second one it is getting closer, but too is not the adverb
- In the third one homemade is a adjective / describing word, not an adverb
- In the fourth one <em>carefully </em>is an adverb and it is <em>italiczed</em>.
<u>Trick:</u>
- Stacey ran quickly.
What did she do? Ran. How did she do it? Quickly.
Verb = ran
Adverb = quickly
Hope this helps, good luck!
(I typed out a lot more to try and explain it since you said you don't understand it at all)
Answer:
Love, hate and honour
Explanation:
There are many components of Shakespeare’s classic, ‘Romeo and Juliet’, which mainly consist of love, hate and honour. This is the story of the incessant love of two young people, which crosses the borders of family and convention. It encompasses love, hate and tons of emotion, tragically ending with the harsh reality of death.
There are many imperative events leading up to various other events that take place in this specific scene. Possibly the most important and the utmost obvious fact that the audience discern about is about the two families, The Capulets and The Montagues.
Answer:
is this in a book or something?
Explanation: