Answer:
(2). Some authorities say get up with the sun; some say get up with one thing, others with another.
(4). It gives you a splendid reputation with everybody to know that you get up with the lark; and if you get the right kind of lark, and work at him right, you can easily train him to get up at half past nine, every time -- it’s no trick at all.
Option 2 and 4
Explanation:
<em>The above option 2 and 4 are those sentences which provides a humourous contrast in Twain's satire regarding to sleeping and waking up as well as a lark.</em>
To "right" an essay would be to correct an essay. The word you're looking for is "write."
Definitionally, you are an animal. How do your senses help you survive?
Touch: you can feel unbearable temperatures (too hot, or too cold). Touch acts as the primary mechanism through which we feel pain: it's what keeps you from leaving your hand in boiling water (though you may dip it in for a second to see just how hot it really is).
Hearing: your eyesight is limited--you don't have a 360° view of the world. Hearing enables you to detect potential dangers that you can neither see, nor smell.
Smell: if food smells rotten, you have a bad reaction to it, which prevents you from eating it (or it should, except in somewhat extreme circumstances).
The taste sense is similar to, and closely linked with, olfactory senses (smell). If a food passes the smell test, an animal will take a small bite of it. If the taste is unpleasant, it's a good indication that whatever the animal just bit should not be consumed. Certain tastes release chemicals in the brain (specifically, dopamine) that provide neurochemical motivation to seek out more of whatever was just eaten.
What is the article about
Answer:
Yes I see
Explanation:
Yes I see pls mark me brain liest