Answer:
adjective. serving as, or being an essential part of, a foundation or basis; basic; underlying: fundamental principles; the fundamental structure. of, relating to, or affecting the foundation or basis: a fundamental revision. being an original or primary source: a fundamental idea.
Explanation:
Here you go all i did was search it up hope this helps :)
Answer:
ADJECTIVEforming a necessary base or core; of central importance.
for example-
"the protection of fundamental human rights"
NOUNa central or primary rule or principle on which something is based.
for example-
"two courses cover the fundamentals of microbiology"
Explanation:
Hope this helps you
Crown me as brainliest:)
Click to read Ain't I a Woman?" by Sojourner Truth. Then answer the question.
The central idea of this speech is that women and men should:
A. act respectfully toward one another.
B. be treated differently.
C. have equal ownership of property.
D. have the same rights.
The central idea of this speech is that women and men should have the same rights.
What is the main idea of the Ain't IA Woman speech?
“Ain't I A Woman?” is the text of a speech she delivered in 1851 at the Women's Convention in Akron, Ohio. The women in attendance were being challenged to call for the right to vote. The purpose of the speech is to persuade the audience that giving women the right to vote is common sense.
Who said Aint IA woman?At the 1851 Women's Rights Convention held in Akron, Ohio, Sojourner Truth delivered what is now recognized as one of the most famous abolitionists and women's rights speeches in American history, “Ain't I a Woman?” She continued to speak out for the rights of African Americans and women during and after the Civil War.
Learn more about Ain't I a Woman here: https://brainly.com/question/2213161
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Had been arrested type of tense
Past Tense
#CarryOnLearning
Answer:
past tense
Explanation:
i think it's past tense because "Had" is past tense
Describe how female politicians are portrayed in the U.S. media?
Answer:
All American politicians face the glare of media coverage, both in running for office and in representing their constituents if elected. But for women seeking or holding high public office, as Maria Braden demonstrates, the scrutiny by newspapers and television can be both withering and damaging—a fact that has changed little over the decades despite the emergence of more women in politics and more women in the news media.
Explanation:
what do you think should be included in the preamble today?
Answer:
Boy's should have to keep their eyes to themselves. I mean I get it if the girl wants it too. But come on. Also, It would be helpful too, I could wear both headphones while running.
Explanation:
Select the correctly punctuated sentence.
John and Marie's car is parked behind Jane and Lisa's motorcycles.
John's and Marie's car is parked behind Jane's and Lisa's motorcycles.
John and Marie's car is parked behind Jane's and Lisa's motorcycles.
John's and Marie's car is parked behind Jane and Lisa's motorcycles.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
The car belongs to both John and Marie and Jane and Lisa both have a motorcycle. So collectively the car is John and Marie's, while Jane owns a motorcycle and Lisa owns a motorcycle.
Answer:
John and Marie's car is parked behind Jane's and Lisa's motorcycles.
Explanation:
i hope this helps you :D
In the sentence, "Rita found her cat hiding in the closet," |
what is the direct object?
Answer:
Rita found
Explanation:
direct sentence
why do boys say "kk" isn't that supposed to be for girls?
Answer:
uhm no
Explanation:
Answer:
Anyone can yay "kk".. its just another was of saying ok..
byeeeee ✌"The Automation Paradox" Paragraph 2
But these fears are misplaced—what’s happening with automation is not so simple or obvious. It turns out that workers will have greater employment opportunities if their occupation undergoes some degree of computer automation. As long as they can learn to use the new tools, automation will be their friend.
Which sentence from paragraph 2 of "The Automation Paradox" best supports James Bessen's claim?
a
It might seem a sure thing that automating a task would reduce employment in an occupation.
b
But not all of the news about computer automation is good.
c
It turns out that workers will have greater employment opportunities if their occupation undergoes some degree of computer automation.
d
Computers are now taking over tasks performed by professional workers, raising fears of massive unemployment.
Answer:
C. It turns out that workers will have greater employment opportunities if their occupation undergoes some degree of computer automation.
Explanation:
Many people fear automation, thinking that computers are taking over tasks performed by workers and that they could lead to unemployment (as stated in options A and D). But, according to James Bessen, that is incorrect. In the given paragraph he explicitly says that it turns out that workers will have greater employment opportunities if their occupation undergoes some degree of computer automation. That's good news about computer automation (option B is incorrect because this paragraph tells us about good, not bad news).
Thus, option C is the correct one.
PLEASE HELP FAS ONLY FIVE MINS FOR QUI LEFT
Petoskey stones are actually fossils! They are the remains of colonial coral that lived in Lake Michigan over 350 million years ago. Their white, circular patterns outline the ancient animals contained within them.
Why did the author use a definition pattern in this passage?
to discuss different types of Petoskey stones
to present the author’s opinion of Petoskey stones
to clarify why the author decided to write about Petoskey stones
to explain what a Petoskey stone is by providing a detailed description
Answer:
To explain what a Petoskey stone is by providing a detailed description
Explanation:
the other answers don't make sense to have with the passage.
1st: doesn't have that many stones
2nd: the info written wasn't an opinion
3rd: the other isn't giving reasons
Answer:
d
Explanation:
took the test
Read the excerpt from Notes of a Native Son. He was not a young man when we were growing up and he had already suffered many kinds of ruin; in his outrageously demanding and protective way he loved his children, who were black like him and menaced, like him: and all these things sometimes showed in his face when he tried, never to my knowledge with any success, to establish contact with any of us. Which best explains why Baldwin chooses the word "menaced"?
A)to illustrate the trickery the children perpetrate
B) to emphasize the cruelty the children endure
C)to suggest that the discrimination is imagined
D)to prove that the children are frequently bothered
The word "menaced" explains the meaning " to emphasize the cruelty the children endure" according to the notes of a "Native Son." So, option (B) is the correct answer.
What does the excerpt mean by choosing menaced?We may infer from the question that the narrator is speaking about his children and how much he cherished and upheld them in his strict manner, as well as how similar they were.
Therefore, Baldwin chose the word menaced to emphasize the cruelty the children endure.
Hence, option (b) is the reason behind the word "menaced."
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Answer:
B. to emphasize the cruelty the children endure
Explanation:
WILL GIve Brainlest
Select the letter of the CORRECTLY written sentence.
a.
He absolutely loved Cats; yet he called The Avengers one of the worst films. Ever.
b.
He called The Avengers one of the worst films ever. Absolutely loved Cats, though.
c.
He absolutely loved Cats, yet he called The Avengers one of the worst films ever.
d.
He absolutely loved Cats. Yet he called The Avengers one of the worst films ever.
Answer:
Explana
The answer is C
according to the information presented in the passage the difference between humorous storytellers
Answer:
there is not any passage
1. In the excerpt below, the word demeaning (di-men'ing) means "I'm just saying that you're not going to get a group of middle-aged me to sit in a room and apply cosmetics to themselves under the instructio Vocabulary in Context A. insulting B. difficult. C. strange. D. disgusting of Brad Pitt, in hopes of looking more like him. Men would realize that task was pointless and demeaning." (Paragraph 9)
Answer:
a
Explanation:
a
Answer:
A. insulting
Explanation:
Hope this helps
Why does Abigail accuse Tituba and Ruth of "conjuring spirit" spirits?
Abigail is afraid the other girls will confess what was truly going on in the woods and she doesn't want to get into trouble. She admits that Tituba and Ruth were conjuring spirits only to save Betty from being accused of witchcraft. Abigail treats the other girls badly, but treats her uncle good and with respect.
Hope this helps : )
- Atargatis Jones
in what aspect does our literature differ from that of the primitive and classical periods?
Answer:
i wish i knew
Explanation:
Jeanne took her two-year-old granddaughter to a beauty parlor for a haircut, but when the
stylist picked up scissors to trim Abigail's lovely red curls, Jeanne scooped up the child and ran
for the door.
O ... haircut but when ...
O ... haircut; but, when ...
O ... haircut, however, when ...
o No change is necessary.
Answer:
No change is necessary
How does the grandmother view the past ?
Answer:
A) She believes people were more respectful of each other in the past
Explanation:
Commonlit
Read these excerpt. One is from the text and one
from another source. Based on these excerpts, it is
reasonable to say that
А
blood types A, B, AB, and O are believed to be the
most unique blood types.
B
anyone who is blood type O can donate blood for
patients who have any of 600 known antigens.
С
with hundreds of known antigens besides A and B, it is
important for blood banks to have many types of blood.
D
if you do not have an A, B, or O blood type, then you
cannot be a blood donor.
Answer:
I think it's C but you didn't include the passage, so I don't know.
Explanation:
Word ending in a consonant + Y + suffix
Why do authors use dramatic irony?
Answer:
to make it more thrilling
Can someone help my grade is super low
Read the story.
Home
Hattie stepped off the screeching subway train and lugged her possessions onto the escalator. When she finally emerged from underground, she got to the sidewalk and looked at the landscape. She was used to flatness and green; the farm that they’d just sold had cattle grazing as far as the eye could see. There was nothing green in sight here as cement behemoths sprung out of the ground taller than the stalks of corn back in Iowa. People zipped in front of her with briefcases tucked to their sides as high heels clacked on the pavement. It was all so overwhelming, so loud, and Hattie put her hands over her ears to shut out the sounds of the taxi horns and the thousand different conversations. Her little sister Evelyn didn’t; she was trying to take it all in.
Her mother pulled out a map from her purse and held it in shaky hands. “According to this, our new home should be right here.”
Hattie traced her mother’s index finger to a building that was so high that she had to crane her neck to see the top.
“This?” Evelyn gasped.
Her father, the man who was never at a loss for words, didn’t say anything. He adjusted the weight of the three bags that contained most of the possessions they’d been able to bring on the three-hour plane journey that had uprooted them from their old lives and deposited them in New York City.
Her father struggled to open the heavy front door, and when they were inside, the smell of hundreds of different meals clashed in her nose: spaghetti, fried chicken, fish, and curry. They stood in front of a bank of elevators as Evelyn pushed the button for the seventeenth floor. When they entered what would be their new home, Hattie spun around in tiny circles as her father gave them the “grand” tour.
“Here is where you and Evelyn will sleep,” he announced. He pointed to a room that was half the size of the Iowa bedroom that was hers alone, the same Iowa bedroom where she’d had all her sleepovers and whose walls still showcased the crayon scribbles from when she was a toddler. She’d tried to scrub them clean, but they were more stubborn than she was, so they would be there for the new family that would be moving in soon.
Evelyn tried to sound excited. “We get to share a room!”
Hattie was grateful for her younger sister, for the way that she could always look at the bright side of things. Hattie couldn’t say anything in response—she’d been speechless for most of the trip. Instead, she followed her father down the hallway that was narrow enough for one person to fit through, maybe two if they squeezed shoulder to shoulder.
“And here is where your mom and I will be.” She could hear the forced excitement in her father’s voice for a move that he didn’t want to make either. But they’d had to sell the farm, and when this opportunity presented itself, there had really been no choice.
The tour was over as soon as it started—tiny kitchen, one bathroom, boxy living room. The four of them would be sharing an apartment that was smaller than the drafty old kitchen in the farmhouse.
Without a word, they grabbed boxes and started about the business of unpacking in rooms that were inches away from one another rather than feet. Hattie walked over to a dirty square window in her new shared bedroom. She wiped it clean, hoping to see something that would remind her of Iowa, but the window only looked out onto more concrete and glass. A wave of sadness washed over her—the first crack in the numbness that she’d been feeling for the past month since she found out about the move. She turned her back and lowered her head so Evelyn wouldn’t see her, but then the sobs came, each louder than the previous one.
There was a hand on her shoulder. She wanted to put the smile back on because she knew it would be better for Evelyn and everyone else that way, but she couldn’t summon it now. She turned around and saw her blurry sister through tear-filled eyes. In front of her face, Evelyn was holding a folded-up picture of the whole family in front of the farmhouse.
“I miss it too,” Evelyn began, “but we don’t have to forget it.”
Together, they taped the picture to the corner of the bedroom window so they could see it whenever they wanted. Hattie pulled Evelyn close, knowing that a place would never be as important as the people in it.
Answer:
Explanation:
Number 4 i think
Answer: Sorry so how my answer got delete But the answer is Evelyn is quicker than Hattie to adjust to a new situation.
Explanation: I took the test
Which statements describe the poem? Check all that apply.
Answer:
i need a poem to answer bro
Explanation:
In Of Mice and Men, which of the following selections best explains
where George and Lennie are going?
O a) They are looking for someone who stole money from them.
.
b) They are going to find a job.
Oc) They are going hunting for rabbits.
d) They are looking to buy a ranch in California.
Pleas help
Answer:they are looking to buy a ranch in California
Explanation:
Read the excerpt from Notes of a Native Son. A few hours after my father's funeral, while he lay in state in the undertaker's chapel, a race riot broke out in Harlem. On the morning of the 3rd of August, we drove my father to the graveyard through a wilderness of smashed plate glass.
Baldwin places his father's funeral in the historical context of the Harlem race riots to show that racial prejudice in early 20th-century America
A) was taking place during his lifetime.
B) was also a cause for mourning
C) was interrupting an important family event.
D)was also coming to an end.
Answer:
B) was also a cause for mourning
Explanation:
edge eng quiz 2021
Baldwin places his father's funeral in the historical context of the Harlem race riots to show that racial prejudice in early 20th-century America was also a cause for mourning. Therefore, option B is correct.
What is the theme in Native Son?One of the most important themes in Native Son is fear. First, Bigger is constantly in a state of fear, which he does not confront and which drives him to be angry and violent. Second, the white community's fear of black people drives their attempts to control black people, often through fear.
Notes is the book that cemented Baldwin's reputation as a social critic, and it remains one of his most admired works.
Baldwin situates his father's funeral within the historical context of the Harlem race riots to demonstrate that racial prejudice was also a cause for mourning in early twentieth-century America.
Thus, option B is correct.
To learn more about the Native Son, follow the link;
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please is for right now
Answer:
1- Lily and Sean are not on vacation.
2-Ben isn't hungry now
Why do you think microblogging platforms have become popular when
regular blogging platforms already exist?
Explanation:
Micro-blogs "enables people to share small elements of information such as sentence fragments, specific images, or video links", which may have been the main explanation for their success.
lines 164-168 how does the story alluded to here relate to the pilgrims experience?
Answer:
i didnt even read this
Explanation:
.PLS HELPPPP ILL GIVE BRAINLIEST!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! IM ON TIMER
Answer:
attach the reflectors to tires and seat
What are the variables to be included and excluded?In research?
Answer: Variables that need to be included or excluded are defined by the research being done and its limitations also.
OR Inclusion and exclusion criteria may include factors such as age, sex, race, ethnicity, type and stage of disease, the subject's previous treatment history, and the presence or absence (as in the case of the “healthy” or “control” subject) of other medical, psychosocial, or emotional conditions.
Jo saved up to take Beth to the mountains for fresh air. Beth asked Instead to go to the shore. What could Jo see that
Beth had not told anyone?
Beth was cross with Jo
Beth no longer wanted to live at home
Beth was heartbroken over Laurie
Beth was very III
Answer:
Beth no longer wanted to live at home
Explanation: