Yeah that’s fine I just don’t know how much you do that you want me
Jesse SWIM across, Does that sound right? NO! So cancel that word out of the selection and we are left with.. Jesse SWUM across and Jesse SWAM across. I would go with SWUM, because swam sounds more like a present kind of thing, and they are talking about last summer. So He SWUM.
The propaganda of telling the truth and keeping it a story and keeping it true
A doesn't make sense since McDonald's is anything but healthy, B also doesn't make sense because kids aren't trying to be "financially independent" usually, and D doesn't make sense either since they never mention corporate values, so I believe that C is the correct answer
Answer:
Annie Dillard read the book 'The Field Book of Ponds and Streams' so many times as she found what she herself did not know she was looking for, the essential tools for naturalist trade.
Explanation:
"An American Childhood" is a memoir of Annie Billard. She wrote about her childhood and her high school days in the book.
In her book, she conveyed the message that how books help people to connect with each other emotionally as well as mentally. As Annie was an earnest reader, so when she was twelve years old, she enrolled herself in the nearest library, in Homewood. In that library, she found the book titled "The Field Book of Ponds and Streams."
<u>She states that she read it several times especially chapter 3 of the book, which explains the essential tools for naturalist trade. Till she read that chapter, she herself was unaware of what she was looking for. The book unveiled to her many words of water and the life of insects. </u>
<u>She used to read the book every year and used to go through the list of names of people who borrowed that book to know that there are other people like her who are eager to find out about the 'ponds' and 'streams.'</u>