Answer:
Introduction to Tornadoes
A tornado is a violent, column-like system of rapidly-rotating air that is in contact with the ground. Most tornadoes are funnel-shaped. Although tornadoes are short-lived (they usually last for a few minutes), they can be very destructive and even deadly.
Explanation:
here
My mom says that I should wake up earlier because I have a lot to do in the morning. I'm usually late for school.
I would say it would be negative because when someone has an eerie smile, or look, they are usually scary, or very weird. Eerie means strange and frightening. So I would say it's negative.
Answer:
Cheryl Strayed told lie to the skiers for being lost because if she would have said that she is lost, they would have rescued her only to end her trail.
Explanation:
'Wild' is a memoir written by Cheryl Strayed of her hiking a thousand miles journey from Pacific Crest Trail to Washington State. She took the route from Pacific Crest Trail to the Mojave Desert through California and Oregon to Washinton State. She completed her journey in ninety-four days.
<u>In her book, titled 'Wild' she said that when she was on the Pacific Crest Trail, a group of three skiers asked her if she is lost, not knowing anything about hiking, Strayed still lied to them that she was not lost. She told them a lie because if she would have told them that she is lost, they would have rescued her and she would not have been able to continue her trail.</u>
Answer:
The sound produced when space between vocal folds is completely closed and then released is called glottal stop.
Explanation:
When the airflow in the glottis or the vocal tract is completely obstructed and then released, we have a consonantal sound called glottal stop or glottal plosive. Due to the obstruction, glottal vibration either becomes irregular or stops.
This sound is more common in certain languages than others. When it comes to the English language, it tends to happen more often in certain regional accents. For American speakers, it is usual to use the glottal stop in words such as curtain or mountain, when the /t/ phoneme is followed by a /n/ phoneme. Americans tend to interrupt the flow of air in the glottis as a means to connect both sounds. To better understand a glottal stop, think of the pause you make between the two syllables of the interjection "uh-oh". That pause is caused by the interruption of airflow in the glottis and is, thus, a glottal stop.