Answer: Rhubard farmers trick the plant into acting like seeds by showing them acts of there previous stages such as placing soil on them so the think they are back in the ground because they have no visual sense.
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer is D.
Explanation:
In my resources that I have, it says in 1918 that the Texas Woman Suffrage Association won the right to vote in primary election and women began being elected for public offices, meaning they were elected by a party leader. Sorry if this doesn't make sense, but also I had this question wrong and realized what the correct answer is. The correct answer is D.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
If the ending is not foreshadowed, readers will be surprised because there were no former hints leading up to it. The reader may feel confused, as the ending will be out of the blue with no prior explanation. The reader may also feel disappointed or let down as there will be nothing connecting the ending to the previous events of the story.
Answer:
B. But when spring came, rich and warm, we raised our sights again.
C. Success lay at the end of summer like a pot of gold, and our campaign got off to a good start.
E. Promise hung about us like the leaves, and wherever we looked, ferns unfurled and birds broke into song.
Explanation:
The sentences from the excerpt that most emphasize spring as hope for the boys are option B, C, and E.
This is because spring is narrated as a moment when the boys raised their sights again, and success lay at the end of summer and that promise hung around like leaves.