True. Students tend to act out when wanting to get attention
Answer:
I assume you are referring to the article written by Jessica McBirney. According to this text, the scandal was both triggered and magnified by the media representations of the two skaters.
Explanation:
While both Harding and Kerrigan were excellent skaters, <u>the general public and corporate sponsors preferred Kerrigan who was "the media darling of American figure skating"</u>. No wonder, then, that Harding would appear to be the prime suspect right after the incident - especially when the attacker confessed to having been hired by Harding's ex-husband.
Even though the prosecution failed to prove Harding's direct involvement in the incident, the media would keep on inflating the scandal and, in a way, conducting their own trial. They went on pestering Harding and building <u>their own version of the story, completing "the caricatures they had begun building for each woman: Tonya Harding, the scrappy, disadvantaged athlete who fought for everything she thought she deserved; and Nancy Kerrigan, the elegant, natural performer who had now, in the media’s eyes, become a victim of ruthless ambition"</u>.
The stories went on even as both skaters made it to the Olympics, where Kerrigan would significantly outperform Harding. Eventually, Harding would "plead guilty to conspiring to hinder a prosecution", which led to her stripping of her sport titles and retreating from skating altogether. Even so, she keeps on denying her involvement to the present day.
The media wouldn't leave Harding alone even after she retired. <u>They went on exploiting the story, turning it into "a universal story about competition, ambition, victimhood, and justice". From there, the story would evolve into a "pop culture trope" exploited in sitcoms and movies, across all media outlets.</u>
IdeationalEnglishAdjective(-)Pertaining to the formation of ideas or thoughts of objects not immediately present to the senses.<span>* <span>1999 </span>, Joyce Crick, translating Sigmund Freud, <span>The Interpretation of Dreams </span>, Oxford 2008, p. 61:</span><span>An immoral dream would demonstrate nothing further of the dreamer's inner life than that he had at some time acquired knowledge of its <span>ideational </span>content , but certainly not that it revealed an impulse of his own psyche.</span>Derived terms* ideationally * ideational apraxis
Sensible
Adjective(en-adj)Perceptible by the senses.* Arbuthnot<span>Air is <span>sensible </span>to the touch by its motion.</span><span>* <span>1778 </span>, William Lewis, The New Dispensatory(page 91)</span><span>The <span>sensible </span>qualities of <span>argentina </span>promise no great virtue of this kind; for to the taste it discovers only a slight roughishness, from whence it may be presumed to be entitled to a place only among the milder corroborants.</span><span>* <span>1902 </span>, William James, <span>The Varieties of Religious Experience </span>, Folio Society 2008, page 45:</span><span>It has been vouchsafed, for example, to very few Christian believers to have had a<span>sensible </span>vision of their Saviour.</span>Easily perceived; appreciable.* Sir W. Temple<span>The disgrace was more <span>sensible </span>than the pain.</span>* Adam Smith<span>The discovery of the mines of America does not seem to have had any very sensibleeffect upon the prices of things in England.</span>(archaic) Able to feel or perceive.* Shakespeare<span>Would your cambric were <span>sensible </span>as your finger.</span>(archaic) Liable to external impression; easily affected; sensitive.<span>a <span>sensible </span>thermometer</span>* Shakespeare<span>with affection wondrous sensible</span>Of or pertaining to the senses; sensory.(archaic) Cognizant; having the perception of something; aware of something.* John Locke<span>He cannot think at any time, waking or sleeping, without being <span>sensible </span>of it.</span>* Addison<span>They are now <span>sensible </span>it would have been better to comply than to refuse.</span>Acting with or showing good sense; able to make good judgements based on reason.<span>* <span>2005 </span>, .</span><span>They ask questions of someone who thinks he's got something <span>sensible </span>to say on some matter when actually he hasn't.</span>Characterized more by usefulness or practicality than by fashionableness, especially of clothing.<span>* <span>1999 </span>, Neil Gaiman, <span>Stardust </span>(2001 Perennial Edition), page 8,</span><span>They would walk, on fair evenings, around the village, and discuss the theory of crop rotation, and the weather, and other such<span>sensible </span>matters.</span>Usage notes* "Sensible" describes the reasonable way in which a person may <span>think'' about things or ''do </span>things: *:<span>It wouldn't be <span>sensible </span>to start all over again now.</span>* "Sensitive" describes an emotional way in which a person may <span>react </span>to things: *: <span>He has always been a <span>sensitive </span>child. </span>*: <span>I didn’t realize she was so<span>sensitive </span>about her work.</span>Related terms* sense * sensory * sensual * sensuous * supersensible
The noun "herself" is a intensive pronoun. Since you can take out the pronoun and the sentence still makes sense that means its intensive. Hope that helps!
Answer:
Explanation: Different between The ninny and the governess The Ninny" by Anton ... by Anton Chekhov is very short story and doesn't have much detail.