A. similes use like or as and metaphors do not
Answer:
its pretty good surprisingly
Answer:
In order to <u>teach students to love and reflect upon their own learning. </u>
Explanation:
Teaching is not only about presenting facts of the teacher's knowledge about an specific subject, and this is what the pedagogical method 'Inquiry-Based Instruction' is about, as it is a form of <em>active learning, </em>an approach on teaching where,<em> </em>rather than giving out all your knowledge as a Teacher, you let your students <em>reflect upon</em>: a topic, question, scenario, problem, etc... beforehand.
I think tha answer is C not sure doe
Answer:
C. Every time a certain church bell rings, something terrible happens to Guy
Explanation:
In english, we say that an element is supernatural when it cannot be explicable by scientific laws and therefore cannot be proven as real. Examples of supernatural things are: miracles, ghosts, angels, demons, ufos, superstitions.
Looking at the options we have, option C mentions that every time a certain church bell rings, something terrible happens to Guy. We can see that this is an example of superstition since something terrible is related to the fact that the bell rings or not. Thus, this is an example of a supernatural element.
Options A and D don't have supernatural elements (a haunted house is made by people so it's not supernatural). Option B has the luck element but it's just a thought the Dr has and not really a supernatural element.