1. Don’t ride
2. Don’t sell
3. Doesn’t bring
4. Doesn’t take
5. Doesn’t cost
6. Don’t seem
7. Don’t buy
8. Doesn’t dance
9. Doesn’t run
10. Doesn’t work
11. Doesn’t eat
12. Don’t swim
13. Don’t ski
14. Doesn’t hurt
15. Don’t give up
Answer:
Write a story about someone who can pause time or re-live old memories at will.
Explanation:
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
These are the similarities and differences between Lieutenant Kotler and Pavel.
Let's talk about Lieutenant Kotler first. He is a young official in the Nazi army. He works at the Auschwitz concentration camp. He loves the Nazi ideology and feels proud of his superiority over the Jewish race. He is stubborn and arrogant. In the case of Pavel, he is just a prisoner that serves the family of Bruno. Pavel and Lieutenant Kotler are directly connected because they work for the family of Bruno.
Meanwhile, Pavel is humble, Lieutenant Kotler is egocentric. He likes to be admired and respected. Pavel likes discretion and he acts like that. Lieutenant Kotler is rude, aggressive with Jewish people and enjoys to offend them.
The correct answer is option letter B (logos). Taken from <em>the United States Declaration of Independence</em> (1776) written by Thomas Jefferson, the excerpt presented above is an example of <u>the use of logos</u>, a literary device that can be an argument or a statement used to convince or persuade the targeted audience. These lines are part of <u>the second part</u> of the Declaration of Independence and here the author explains to the audience <u>why the colonies wanted to separate</u> and <u>all the transgressions the British government made against the colonists</u>.
Answer:
There are scarlet letters today, even in an evolved and modern society.
Explanation:
The term "scarlet letter" refers to a novel of the same name written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, where a woman carried the letter "A" on her chest to show people that she was an outcast of society and thus marginalized her and provoked the embarrassment to her.
Currently, there are "modern escalating letters" that some citizens carry due to factors they have no control over, such as people who suffer from a mental problem or illness and are treated marginally by society, as shown in the article "Mental Illness Stigma: Overcoming the 'Scarlet Letter' of Our Times ". These scarlet letters unfairly define people and prevent them from improving their living conditions, but make them ashamed, sad and often even sicker.