They use primary-source quotations to show that enslaved people in Saint Domingue were willing to destroy property to gain their freedom.
Answer:
Maybe you're not setting the right goals - for the right reasons. Maybe you need HARD goals - as in heartfelt, animated, required and difficult. That acronym, from Leadership IQ President Mark Murphy's book of the same name, makes a case that the best goals come with emotional attachments. "The heartfelt piece comes first. If that's not there, it's hard to make the rest of the goal work," said Murphy.
Making the goal difficult means you're setting a high standard for achievement. "They were big. They were scary. They were out of our comfort zone," he said. And they produced some amazing results, whether you're losing 35 pounds or creating jobs for 21 women in Detroit or Delhi or seeing your photos in a major museum exhibit. Some may be 10-year goals or lifetime goals - not something you're going to achieve in a year.
Murphy thinks most corporate goal-setting is far too perfunctory - and doesn't allow enough room for passion and amazingly positive results. When I spoke to him for a Washington Post Capital Business article last year, he told how he took up running even though he has "zero natural running ability" because of his health goals and his wife's interest. He sets plenty of business goals too - but those are fueled by passion and keen interest.
Explanation:
The correct sentence is option two:
There have been many accidents during airshows; for example, last year the wind toppled a tent and equipment on top of bystanders.
The semicolon is a punctuation mark which indicates a pause, usually between two clauses that are not joined by a coordinating conjunction. Semicolons can also replace commas to separate elements in a list that already includes commas.
In the example sentence, the semicolon separates two clauses. Besides, a comma follows the introductory phrase "for example" because it introduces a clause.
Answer:
A) It creates a sense of urgency.
Explanation:
A change in pace that is present in the second paragraph creates a sense of urgency. We can feel that by the use of words <em>suddenly, rushing, immediately, rushed, racing.</em> Rosita has to make it to the graduation ceremony and she could be late if she doesn't hurry. She has to do a lot of things, and all of them are described in a relatively short paragraph. All of that contributes to the sense of urgency.