This question is incomplete, here´s the complete question.
Read "A Desperate Trek Across America," by Andrés Reséndez
The author includes descriptions of “makeshift vessels” manufactured using “jury-rigged” tools.how do these descriptions affect your perception of the situation?
Answer:
The words chosen for the description reveal how delicate and
precarious the situation was, as Cabeza de Vaca and his men had to depend on improvised transportation and weaponry to survive.
Explanation:
"Makeshift vessels" refers to boats built in an improvised fashion, while "jury-rigged" saws refer to saws that had gone through makeshift repairs.
Answer: Hamilton's failure to uphold his private marriage vow inevitably made any public vow he made suspect. In a Biblical allusion to King David, she warned that with Hamilton in charge of the army, “Every Uriah must tremble for his Bathsheba.”
Explanation:
The question above does not present the text to which it refers. This makes it impossible for me to show you an answer. However, I will show you how you can find the answer you need.
First, you will need to read the text to which the question refers. This reading will be able to show you how the bank clerk is behaving, his thoughts, and the emotions he is expressing. This will be able to show you the emotional state of that character.
This because:
- Emotional state refers to how the character is mentally.
- This state is revealed through the behavior and the way the character is expressing his feelings.
Thus, if the bank clerk is acting calmly and expressing feelings that reflect this tranquility, it is because he is in a calm emotional state.
Otherwise, if the character is sad, expressing anger, or any other negative feeling, it means he is in an equally negative emotional state. Likewise, if he displays happy behaviors, expresses joy, love, and any happy feelings, it means he is happy and positive.
More information:
brainly.com/question/14990686?referrer=searchResults
Answer:
We will tell…” is actually using the modal verb will/would in a present time sense or a future time sense therefore the present tense /arrives/ is the only choice that matches in grammar. …will tell = We are using our will [right now] to decide what we shall say when he arrives.
Other Possibilities:
1. We will tell him about it after he has arrived.
2. We would have told him about it after he had arrived.
Explanation: