Answer:
i wasn't told by her......
Explanation:
is that when you commit a crime, like murder, you cannot escape your guilty conscience, no matter what the circumstances or your state of mind. take the narrators motivations, for example
Answer:
pier
Explanation:
In this text, there are several things that the seaplane could have passed before increasing speed. Usually seaplanes are docked close to the shore along a dock or pier.
After taxiing away from the dock, the floatplanes generally pass the end of the pier and, once in open water, increase speed to prepare for takeoff.
Another possibility could be <em>buoy</em> since these often mark the end of shallow water and the expanse of deeper water more appropriate for takeoff.
Ani analyses how "DeLuca's haphazard patchwork of reasoning and evidence leaves the reader wondering whether he believes his own claim". According to Ani he quotes not only supporters of the Nobel price committee but also detractors. He includes a sampling of Dylan's lyrics and leaves them to speak for themselves.
The evidence (quotes) from the article that best supports Ani's evaluation are:
1. "And it’s a good thing [his lyrics] have been published, because if you’ve gone to see the famously sneering and syllable-garbling Dylan play live in recent years, you probably couldn’t understand a word he was singing."
We could interpret this quote as contradictory, it is not necessarily for or against Dylan's Nobel Price. You could say he is confusing his readers, he seems to be against the sung lyrics and for the published ones.
2. "On one end of Dylan's songwriting spectrum is the vengeful, resolute, and timeless 'Masters Of War' . . . . It’s high dudgeon at its finest: ‘Let me ask you one question: Is your money that good? / Will it buy you forgiveness? Do you think that it could?"
Ani also says that he does a sampling of the lyrics and allows them to speak for themselves. This excerpt shows part of a lyric from the song "Masters of War". He is not necessarily saying its a "good" or "bad" lyric, he describes it as: "vengeful, resolute, and timeless" the reader must decide about its quality or if it is the kind of work that deserves a Nobel Price.
Can you rephrase that, I don't understand what you mean