Answer:
Find the dialogue below.
Explanation:
Me: Hello, Dad. You look so sad. What is the problem?
Dad: Hello, Son. You are welcome. I feel dejected, but we will talk about it later.
Me: No, Dad. I will like to know what the matter is now.
Dad: Okay, son. Have a sit.
Me: (<em>Sits</em>)
Dad: You see my son, I lost my savings to a bad investment choice. I tried every possible means to salvage the situation but they all have yielded no results.
Me: Oh my God!
Dad: The situation is so bad that we would have to forfeit this home to a smaller one. You might even have to share a room with your brother, John, in the new house.
Me: I am so sorry to hear that Dad. It's a pity this had to happen now. But I promise to cooperate with you and the family at this trying time. I believe we will overcome it.
Dad: (<em>Smiles and pats son on the back</em>). Thanks, my boy. We will.
Answer:
Believe? religion? giving a heck what others think?
Explanation:
Expresses ideas in full sentences or complete thoughts
The Americans felt impelled to separate from their mother country, Britain, and eventually create a dream of their own.
All men are equal - God has given them those unalienable rights. The people are those who make decisions - there is a Government, but if it becomes destructive, it is the people who decide how to organize the country.
Jefferson talks about the downsides of being a British colony, and thus creates a chance for the Americans to create a country in which these rules needn't be followed so blindly. They are free to do what they wish, because it is their God-given right.
Carl Sandberg is describing the pleasant feeling of being shrouded in fog and how it arrives gently, sits for awhile then moves on so is unobtrusive whereas Robert Frost in Mending Wall there is a strong skepticism about his neighbour's dictum that "good walls make good neighbours" and his feelings of misgivings about maintaining a wall between adjacent properties when there are no cows to corral or no obvious practical reasons for the wall.