"The Open Window"
Could have an exclamation or could be a question depending on the text
Answer:
A. Tessie Hutchinson is in conflict with the society.
Explanation:
A conflict in this case is the disagreement between two or more people on a particular point of view. Tessie Hutchinson does not believe that the time frame given to Mr. Hutchinson to take his papers was ideal or fair enough. This is in contrast to the viewpoint of every other person, including Mr. Hutchinson who tells Tessie to 'shut up'. While Mrs Delacroix tells Tessie to 'be a good sport', Mrs Grace pointed out that, 'every other person was given the same chance'.
So, the society here composed of the greater number of people are in disagreement with Tessie. So, we can say that Tessie is in conflict with the society.
Answer:
Peers
- You hate getting shots at the doctor's office, but did ya know that it has part of a weakened organism in it so your body can fight it. Seems pretty cool actually.
- If you're not up to date with your vaccinations, you put other kids at risk. We don't wanna do that, right?
Parents
- In 2013, more than 100,000 children died of measles. These deaths could have been prevented by administering by administering the measles vaccination.
- Before a vaccination is administered, it goes through testing to make sure that it is safe, and manufacturers use a post-licensure surveillance system to ensure that "that vaccines are some of the safest products in all of the medicine"
Explanation:
I have been able to drag each tile to the correct location on the table.
When Jacquelin is reading her essay to her peers, you will discover that she will point out the issue of how some young people hate going to the doctor's office. Most children hate being injected. Also, the second sentence under Peers shows that this part of the speech will be presented to her peers because she talks of the danger of not staying up to date with your vaccinations which may put others at risk.
In the Parents column, Jacquelin is giving the parents background information about measles and the process vaccines pass through. Also, she informs them about the need of vaccinating their children.
If yes means it’s a reliable source then here’s the answers (if not just do the opposite)
Archives- yes
Weblog history nerd- no
Wikipedia- no
Weblog professor- yes
.org from 2008- no
.com online store- no
.gov- yes
With claims you can’t verify- no