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English, 24.06.2019 15:30, desdes1499

Myths often function as a connection to the

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English, 21.06.2019 13:10, mmaglaya1
Iam not sure about this one is there anyway you can ? young, like de sacy and akerblad before him, decided their demotic equivalent must be a group of characters that occurred fourteen times. which answer option best describes the sentence? this sentence is biased because it reflects the belief that young was smarter than de sacy and akerblad. this sentence is biased because it reflects the belief that young’s ideas were unreasonable. this sentence is unbiased because it simply states a fact about something that young believed. this sentence is unbiased because it simply states a fact about why young was more successful than de sacy and akerblad.
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English, 21.06.2019 13:30, 401666
Which statement best expresses the meaning of these lines from “the courage that my mother had”? that courage like a rock, which she / has no more need of, and i have. a. the speaker equates her mother's courage with a rock. b. the speaker needs the kind of courage her mother showed. c. the speaker realizes her mother no longer needs courage d. the speaker realizes her mother found courage in rocks.
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English, 21.06.2019 13:40, Rogeartest4
Drag each label to the correct location. each label can be used more than once. based on this excerpt from f. scott fitzgerald's "bernice bobs her hair," match each character with the type of character element he or she represents. "you may as well stop making a fool of yourself over warren mcintyre. he doesn't care a snap of his fingers about you." for a tense moment they regarded each other—marjorie scornful, aloof; bernice astounded, half-angry, half-afraid. then two cars drove up in front of the house and there was a riotous honking. both of them gasped faintly, turned, and side by side hurried out. all through the bridge party bernice strove in vain to master arising uneasiness. she had offended marjorie, the sphinx of sphinxes. with the most wholesome and innocent intentions in the world she had stolen marjorie's property. she felt suddenly and horribly guilty. after the bridge game, when they sat in an informal circle and the conversation became general, the storm gradually broke. little otis ormonde inadvertently precipitated it. "when you going back to kindergarten, otis? " some one had asked. "me? day bernice gets her hair bobbed." "then your education's over," said marjorie quickly. "that's only a bluff of hers. i should think you'd have realized." "that a fact? " demanded otis, giving bernice a reproachful glance. "there's a lot of bluffs in the world," continued marjorie quite pleasantly. "i should think you'd be young enough to know that, otis." "well," said otis, "maybe so. but gee! with a line like bernice's—" "really? " yawned marjorie. "what's her latest bon mot? " no one seemed to know. in fact, bernice, having trifled with her muse's beau, had said nothing memorable of late. "was that really all a line? " asked roberta curiously. bernice hesitated. she felt that wit in some form was demanded of her, but under her cousin's suddenly frigid eyes she was completely incapacitated.
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English, 21.06.2019 15:00, DisneyGirl11
In the context of the passage, what does the word torpid mean? b. predatory a. energetic c. dormant d. aquatic
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