Answer: A freezing ice cream
Explanation: other post and took quiz
Answer:
A few girls, including Jan have ice skates.
Explanation:
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There's a dude named Capricorn Anderson who lives with his Grandma Rain on a hippie commune. Suddenly, Rain gets badly injured and Capricorn is sent to live outside of his commune in the normal society with a social worker and her sixteen year old daughter. Capricorn has a difficult time fitting in at school because he isn't familiar with electricity, he doesn't believe in lockers, he is always peaceful and meditating, and he wears tie dyed clothes like a typical hippie. It's as if a boy from the 1960's has suddenly been dropped in this day and age. The conflict is that Capricorn is so different from the environment around him, and he is constantly being teased, making it very hard for him to fit in.
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Answer:
Having left the arid, chemical-laden, dying Earth for a yearlong assignment, Ishmael awakens from stasis already on the Pequod, a ship in the middle of the ocean on a planet called Cretacea. He’s never seen an ocean before—nor rain, nor plants, nor solid food, nor nonhuman animals like the sea creatures this ship is hunting. He needs money to buy his foster parents passage off of Earth, but Capt. Ahab’s singular, manic focus on killing the Great Terrafin (think: white whale) prevents the crew from harvesting other sea animals, despite the profit they offer. Strasser crams in a lot: post-apocalyptic Earth, ship life, enthusiastic and bloody sea hunting, time travel, naturally occurring opioids, pirates, stereotypically simple-hearted islanders, inexplicable and pointless dialects, and a blind man who smells information. The rusty, old Pequod is powered by nuclear reactor, and technological gadgets—tablets, magnetic levitation, drones that track sea life—make strange bedfellows for harpoons and people unaware of the concept of reading. Despite the science-fiction premise—including a surprise late reveal—this has a pure adventure core; Ishmael undergoes no emotional growth arc whatsoever, and his characterization comes straight from lost-heir fantasy.