From this story we can choose the next portions:
<span>“One sky, towards which we sometimes lift our eyes.” you can change lift to elevate cuase is more understandable
“we head home, through the gloss of rain or weight of snow.”
lets change through to admist which seems a better expression
“Or the impossible vocabulary of sorrow that won’t explain,” I changed impossible to unreachable cause it fits better.
“Who couldn’t give you what you wanted.” You can change wanted to recieved. to denote the complete action of a gitf given
"</span>My face, your face, millions of faces in morning's mirrors,<span>
</span><span>each one yawning to life, crescendoing<span> into our day" change crescendoing for uplift to do it more understandable</span></span>
Answer:
B. Direct object
Explanation:
"...the moon" is known to be direct object. The direct object is known to be the noun or noun phrase which the subject acts upon. This means that the direct object is receiving the action from the subject.
In the given sentence, "The cow..." is the subject, "...jumped over..." is the action/verb while "...the moon" is the direct object.
The basic construction in identifying a direct object works like this: <em>Subject + Verb + Who or What.</em>
Answer:
Is competition actually needed to be successful? Infact Certain competitiveness is necessary for being successful. Good competition can bring out creativity, clarity, motivation, and develop new beliefs, and it teaches us how to goal set. "You have competition everyday because you set such high standards for yourselves that you have to go out everyday and live up to that". "Healthy competition is good for all. Dealing with wins & losses in any competitive arena is like getting an immunity shot against disease". Bad competition on the other hand can destroy your self esteem, make you full of yourselves, aggressive, self absorbed, picky, stressed out. So there for the right competition is really good for being successful, and can teach you some life lessons.
Explanation:
Answer: The answer is A. Fahrenheit 451 is the temperature at which paper burns.