Answer: C, A, C, D, B, B, B, C
Explanation: I'm not really sure what to say for an explanation besides that fact that, in context, the correct choice is a simplified version of the definition. Hope this helps.
Brainliest please?
Answer: Last night my sister want to go to the movies. I wanted to go with her. What was stopping us? I had to finish my math homework first. I asked my sister to wait for me. What do you think she did? She helped me figure out the answers. We made it to the show just in time.
Explanation:
Answer:
To be free has a lot of meaning, one could be, be free of responsibility or choice. In my opinion to be free means, to have the ability to do something without someone questioning my actions or try to stop me from doin g my actions. I can learn whatever I want and think how I want. I can talk how I want and have my own opinions without predijuice or bias against me. Be free is a very open statement that can be taken from a very moderate view of everyone has an opinion and no one can put you in jail for it to a very extremism view, like the book The Giver, where everyone doesn't make choices and the world is the same. Everyone would be free of this modern society in that book and be free from the burden of making money, hard choices, or how to live under weird conditions. Everyone follows instructions on how to live their daily lives. How to work, how to live, how to do most things. A book dictates what happens to criminals who break their laws people are free from deciding almost everything. Who they live, who they work with, what they learn, or how they learn. That is the term 'be free' in extremism. That is what it means to be free.
Answer:What inference can you make about The Giver's perspective on his community based on his dialogue and demeanor in chapter 13? Cite text evidence in your response. ... Based on The Giver's dialogue and demeanor, he does not believe the community has made the right decision to move to Sameness.
Explanation:
The correct answer is A, angry.
Whereas he is secretive in the beginning when he doesn't want to show his identity to the Hobbits, and he is definitely brave and devoted, he doesn't really show the emotion of anger, either in the movies, or in the books.