Answer: philanthropic kindhearted
thoughtful uneconomical
sociable uncynical
unenvious satisfied
compassionate good
Explanation:
Google and give me brainlist ples cus it’s right
Answer:
Paradise, joyfull and entertained
Explanation:
Being in a happy place where you can wish upon something is a typical utopia dream but mine is where my books come alive. What can I say im an adventure gal. lol
Answer:People make fun of Bobby because of his weight. He has been called “Pork Chop, Roly-Poly, Dough Boy, and Fluff.”
Explanation:
Mr. Kiley asks Bobby and Addie to speak with him and suggests that they go ahead and lead the No-Name Day
In the end, it is revealed that Bobby later becomes a United States Senator, and all the kids who called him names now brag about having known him in middle school.
Together, Bobby, Skeezie, Addie, and Joe are the Gang of Five—even though there are only four of them. The name of their gang is a joke, but they also “figure that there’s one more kid out there who’s going to need a gang to be part of.” They certainly are not the only misfits at Paintbrush Falls Middle School.
Bobby works as a tie salesman after school.
Hopefully these help
The evidence is effective because Nehru gives several examples to the assembly of the hard work that needs to be done.
Through an rhetorical device called anaphora (a repetition at the beginning of a phrase), Nehru is listing the different domains he and his audience, the people of India, will need to work on. Examples of anaphora in the excerpt are "<u>and</u> end poverty <u>and</u> ignorance <u>and</u> disease;" or "<u>to</u> bring" – "<u>to</u> fight" – "<u>to</u> build up" – "<u>to</u> create." He separates the areas to improve in categories:
- more freedom and opportunity, especially to the lower classes ("the peasants and workers of India");
- reduce poverty, ignorance and disease;
- reinforce the nation ("prosperous, democratic and progressive");
- establish just institutions ("social, economic and political institutions which will ensure justice and fullness of life").
Nehru is also convincing the audience that even though the work will be difficult, it is their duty, their responsibility, and the only path to take:
- "The future beckons to us;"
- "till we redeem our pledge, ... till we make all the people of India what destiny intended them to be."