<u>Answer</u>:
The text discusses the Chinese calendar by writing, "Dragons are included along with eleven real animals” which implies that dragons are real because all the other animals on the calendar are real.
Option D is the right answer.
<u>Explanation</u>:
In the excerpt, the author starts his search based on the words of wisdom by his grandmother. Her grandmother told her that one should believe in science but one should also believe in things which wasn't proven by science. He finds the mention of dragons in almost every culture and thinks they aren’t fictional. He finds them being mentioned in stories, folklore, in the entries of Marco Polo and in the Bible.
He also observes that the Chinese calendar comprises of twelve animals, eleven out of them are real ones. So he comes to this conclusion that there is a strong possibility that dragons did exist so it is as real as the other eleven animals in the calendar.
Okay, so I think your answer is <span>D. He reads the instructions below the door.
I'm pretty sure I'm right, but good luck my dude.</span>
Pizza is good and spaghetti or tacos if you want to j secarse he
She thinks that the Socs are fake really she says that there raw like they don't tell others how they feel they act like they have everything where as the greasers do care about each others feelings an lets them be known, greasers are also like family they take up for each other.
Answer:
Stage 1, Infancy:A helpless baby, just crying and throwing up.
Stage 2, Schoolboy:This is where his formal education starts but he is not entirely happy with school. His mother is ambitious for him and has washed his face thoroughly before sending him off to school but he goes very slowly and reluctantly.
Stage 3, Teenager:He’s grown into his late teens and his main interest is girls. He’s likely to make a bit of a fool of himself with them. He is sentimental, sighing and writing poems to girls, making himself a bit ridiculous.
Stage 4, Young man:He’s a bold and fearless soldier – passionate in the causes he’s prepared to fight for and quickly springs into action.
Stage 5, Middle-aged:He regards himself as wise and experienced and doesn’t mind sharing his views and ideas with anyone and likes making speeches. He’s made a name for himself and is prosperous and respected. As a result of his success, he’s become vain. He enjoys the finer things in life, like good food.
Stage 6, Old man:He is old and nothing like his former self – physically or mentally. He looks and behaves like an old man, dresses like one and he has a thin piping voice now. His influence slips away.
Stage 7, Dotage and death:He loses his mind in senility. His hair and teeth fall out and his sight goes. Then he loses everything as he almost sinks into death.
I agree with Shakespeare’s division of life into seven stages as everyone passes from these stages .