•Show, not tell assignment•
1. Tell: “it’s snowed hard all through the night.”
Sho...
•Show, not tell assignment•
1. Tell: “it’s snowed hard all through the night.”
Show:
2. Tell: “we spent the day at the beach.”
Show:
3. Tell: “I had fun at summer camp.”
Show:
4. Tell: “Tim was nervous about the history test.”
Show:
I need these answered by today plzzz‼️
Answers: 1
English, 21.06.2019 17:30
Read the excerpt from warriors don't cry. as we approached behind them, we could see only the clusters of white people that stretched for a distance of two blocks along the entire span of the school building. my mind could take in the sights and sounds only one by one: flashing cameras, voices shouting in my ears, men and women jostling each other, old people, young people, people running, uniformed police officers walking, men standing still, men and women waving their fists, and then the long line of uniformed soldiers carrying weapons just like in the war movies i had seen. which words create the mood in the excerpt? check all that apply.
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 05:10
“dylan was a revolutionary,” bruce springsteen said in his 1988 speech inducting dylan into the rock and roll hall of fame. “the way that elvis freed your body, bob freed your mind.” early masterpieces such as “a hard rain’s a-gonna fall” and “visions of johanna” and “like a rolling stone” fueled a debate: are rock lyrics poetry? the answer must be yes, because on thursday, dylan was awarded the highest honor for a writer: the nobel prize in literature. the swedish academy, in making him the first american winner since novelist toni morrison in 1993, cited him for “having created new poetic expressions within the great american song tradition.” –“dylan's nobel prize settles debate: rock lyrics are poetry,” dan deluca what is the best summary of the author’s claim? rock lyrics can be like poetry. bob dylan was a revolutionary. musicians deserve nobel prizes. more americans deserve nobel prizes.
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 07:30
Have you ever thought you understood a person based on a story that you have heard about them? have you ever guessed about a person's personal life because of the clothes they wore? or, have you judged a person because of their friends? although classifying people in this way is typically discouraged, authors deliberately use your preconceived ideas to you form an opinion about the character or to at least have a better understanding. can you think of a time that you made a character call about someone based on external aspects? were you correct, or incorrect? has anyone ever made an incorrect assessment of you based on external aspects? write two paragraphs about it in your journal.
Answers: 1
Mathematics, 20.02.2020 18:14
Health, 20.02.2020 18:14
Physics, 20.02.2020 18:15
Social Studies, 20.02.2020 18:16
Computers and Technology, 20.02.2020 18:16
Mathematics, 20.02.2020 18:17
Mathematics, 20.02.2020 18:18
Mathematics, 20.02.2020 18:20
Mathematics, 20.02.2020 18:21