The headline describes how a black family living in a white neighborhood was bombed in their home
When we are little we are taught to read and we are encouraged to continue reading throughout our academic training, since the presence of texts is constant in schools. We know that schools are efficient in teaching us to read, but we must affirm that learning to read is not enough, it is necessary that we learn to put reading as a habit.
Having reading as a habit is aggrandizing and constructive. This is because reading gives us vocabulary, stimulates our mind, our critical sense, our ability to communicate, our writing and our reasoning. These are essential characteristics in the life of a citizen who is aware of his responsibilities and rights.
Reading is a habit that empowers people. A society of readers is an educated society that will not be easily deceived by broken political promises and by rulers and lying ideologies that do not know how to govern and instruct. This is because the habit of reading provides vast knowledge and strong arguments to counter any attempt at deception.
Therefore, we can say that we must instruct our youth to read. Encourage reading for pleasure, out of curiosity, for fun and not out of obligation. We must encourage reading as something inherent in our construction as thinking and rational human beings.
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "<span>A.direct object." I assume that the underlined word is 'Game' So, the underlined word, game in the sentence is a direct object which is directly identified by the word playing.</span>
Answer:
This passage is from chapter 6 of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby", where Nick believes Jay Gatsby's dream of getting Daisy back after all the years is ending.
Explanation:
In Chapter 6 of "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Nick Carraway narrates how Jay Gatsby had wanted to get back with his former lover Daisy. But Daisy had already married Tom Buchanan, who Jay despises.
Tom and Daisy had come to Gatsby's house to party and Tom had decided to follow Daisy just to keep an eye on Gatsby. After the party got over and everyone has left, Gatsby exclaimed to Nick that Daisy is different, that "<em>she doesn't understand</em>". When asked further, Nick realizes that Jay wanted Daisy to leave her husband and come to him. He wanted her to "<em>obliterate the four years</em>" she's married to Tom, and "<em>go back to Louisville and be married from her house—just as if it were five years ago</em>". For Gatsby's part, it sounded a bit greedy, expecting her to act how he wanted things to be.
Madly in love with her, he wanted to get back with her on his terms, not thinking of what the others will feel. This, Nick feels, is the blatant end of Gatsby's dream which was to get Daisy back. This is his version of truth, Daisy telling Tom "<em>I never loved you</em>" and go to Jay, while the truth was that it was just a dream, wishful thinking. Unable to see past his own fantasies and wants, he believes and want/ expect Daisy to return to him.
I'd sat the answer is 'all of the above'. Because 'history of the relationship' is important - you won't greet a person you've just met the same way you'd great your best friend. "Context' is also important, because you won't speak the same way at a gala, or at a casual meeting with your friends. "Type of the conversation desired" is also relevant, because the way you greet someone will lead the course of your conversation.