Answer:
The answer is: tired.
Explanation:
This excerpt narrates how the man and woman arrive to the top of the mountains, tired and beat. So they explain through really predictable words such as: exhausted, went to sleep... and also their desperation to get some rest when they say: <em>"I took a buffalo rope from the packs and wrapped myself in it..."</em>
Eye Contact, Good Posture, Correct Grammar. Only speaking when spoken to. No interrupting.
Answer:
President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act in 1830 to relocate Native Indians to the west. In his "On Indian Removal" speech, he discusses how Indian Removal benefits both Indians and White Americans. A personal story about a young boy being relocated with his clan on the Trail of Tears is another writing about Native American removal. Though these two readings deal with the same subject, they use quite different language to express their views on Native American removal. The situation is described differently in both pieces, as is the sentence structure and tone. The language differences between Jackson's "On Indian Removal" and Rutledge's "Samuel's Memory" show how separate groups viewed and were affected by Indian removal.
Answer:
inside story
Explanation:
The action of a play is generally confined to a "world" of its own—that is, to a fictional universe that contains all the characters and events of the play—and none of the characters or actions moves outside the orbit of that world.