Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:
Nights and Dragons— From the memoir of author Abigail Prynne I could have given up, but I thought about my grandmother. She always told me that "people who believe that science is the answer to everything are missing out on everything else." With her words in mind, I searched some more. There were many facts that hinted that dragons may not be fictional. I noticed that cultures across the world all described dragons in similar ways. This was odd because they had no way to communicate with each other. I found dragons mentioned in more than just stories. They appeared in old legal papers, in the travel logs of Marco Polo, and in the Bible. I saw that the Chinese calendar uses a different animal each year. Dragons are included along with eleven real animals. I began to believe it was a real possibility that all of these people were talking about a creature that actually existed. The text discusses the Chinese calendar by writing, "Dragons are included along with eleven real animals." What is the main idea of the passage?
Answer:
The main idea of the text is that dragons may have existed in real life and that science is not enough to prove it or not.
Explanation:
The text shows that although science determines that dragons did not exist, many ancient cultures describe this animal together with the animals we know in real life. Furthermore, these cultures are different from each other, many of them show no similarities. Which proves that dragons may have been real animals, seen by ancient societies, but now extinct, or not.
Answer:
The flag went up and down in the wind.
The appropriate response is letter D. Clear verse is the gauge meter of this lyric, however few of the lines walk along in clear verse's trademark bolt step iambs, five side by side. Ice keeps up five focused on syllables for each line, however he differs the feet broadly to manage the normal discourse like nature of the verse.
To compel the audience to think about the actions of anarchists and urge wealthy Indians to act instead of merely talking about poverty is the goal of the author's use of Hypophora. Hypophora is a figure of speech where the author raises a question, and then immediately provides an answer to that question.
Here is the solution of the given problem above.
Given: Area = 26 square feet
Length = 5 1/2 or 5.5 feet
? = width
Formula: Area = L x W
So let's substitute the given values:
26 ft2 = 5.5ft (W)
w= 4.73ft
Now we divide both sides with 5.5ft and we get 4.73. So the width is 4.73 feet. To check, 5.5 x 4.73 is equal to 26.02. The final answer would be, width is 4.73 feet. Hope this solution helps!