<span>A. This sentiment is shared by Olympic-medalist Sandy Connor, who says, "in the end, it was worth every sacrifice I made to get there."
This successfully and neatly integrates a quote into the text</span>
Answer:
Psychology is the branch of science that studies the mind and behavior.
Maslow's hierarchy of needs helps people understand themselves in a new way.
Explanation:
You haven't provided the passage, but based on the way the question was formalized and the options you were given, I can answer your question anyway.
Because the question asks <em>which statements</em>, we know that there is more than one correct answer. Based on the options, I can conclude that the passage tells about psychology and then about Maslow's hierarchy of needs.
A summary is a shortened version of a piece of writing (e.g. article, poem, chapter, novel). It should contain only the text's main ideas and the most important supporting details. The main idea of a text is the main point the author is making.
An objective statement is a statement based on facts. Unlike subjective statements, they are not influenced by a person's personal opinions, beliefs, feelings, or assumptions.
Only these two statements are objective and represent the main ideas:
- <em>Psychology is the branch of science that studies the mind and behavior.</em>
- <em>Maslow's hierarchy of needs helps people understand themselves in a new way.</em>
The rest of the options are supporting details and contain subjective language, which is why they can't be correct.
Synonym : dependency, reliance
Antonym : independence<span>, </span>independency<span>, </span>self-dependence<span>, </span>self-reliance<span>, </span>self-sufficiency<span>, </span><span>self-support
Hope this helps. c:</span>
Answer:
We were talking about theme and how we can dig it out of our stories. ... I want to give you five simple ways to weave theme into your story. Imagery. William Shakespeare uses a lot of imagery to reinforce his themes in his tragedy, Hamlet. ... Throughout the play, various characters and actions and dialogue ...
Explanation:
<span>Bacon lists Cupid’s attributes in order to compare them to the features of the atom.
Just like Cupid, atoms too are primary seeds that make up the world, and just like Cupid, they are naked, because they are not merged into a compound, but rather remain their "innocent" selves. He doesn't use this comparison to prove that Cupid is real (nobody can do that), or to prove he is a child (he is often portrayed as one), or to disprove the existence of atoms (it has been proven already they exist).
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