Answer:
thx
Explanation:
i will repay you in the future, kind internet stranger
Answer:
1. Hurrication
2. Hypermarket
3. Xerox
4. Incommodeicado
5. Megacity
Explanation:
HURRICATION: The unexpected day off work or school resulting from a nearby hurricane, producing enough rain and wind to shut everything down for a day or two, but not enough of a direct hit to cause damage or worry. “The hurrication caused by Superstorm Sandy left us unable to conduct any of our weekly client conference calls.”
INCOMMODEICADO: The state of being in the bathroom without a cell phone. “I excused myself from the marathon meetings to return a reporter’s call on deadline but found myself incommodeicado!”
HYPERMARKET: A very large shop
WIRELESS: An electronic device without wire or cable
XEROX: A trademark of digital printing equipment
MEGACITY: A big city
Answer:
Answer B
Explanation:
Hope this helps this time
Answer:
The narrator believed that she and her mother looked comical to the strangers.
Explanation:
"Funny in Farsi" is a memoir written by Firoozeh Dumas. The book deals with the author's moving to America from Iran and the suddden change of surroundings, culture, people, language etc.
Now, we can infer the author's attention in this sentence from it's context. She compares their visit to the stranger's house to a personal circus performance. To most people, visit to a circus is funny and entertaining, so Dumas concludes that was the way strangers felt to the sight of her and her mother due to different clothes, customs and a complete lack of basics of the language.
Kennedy felt great pressure to have the United States "catch up to and overtake" the Soviet Union in the "space race." Four years after the Sputnik shock of 1957, the cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin had become the first human in space on April 12, 1961, greatly embarrassing the U.S. While Alan Shepard became the first American in space on May 5, he only flew on a short suborbital flight instead of orbiting the Earth, as Gagarin had done. In addition, the Bay of Pigs fiasco in mid-April put unquantifiable pressure on Kennedy. He wanted to announce a program that the U.S. had a strong chance at achieving before the Soviet Union. After consulting with Vice President Johnson, NASA Administrator James Webb, and other officials, he concluded that landing an American on the Moon would be a very challenging technological feat, but an area of space exploration in which the U.S. actually had a potential lead. Thus the cold war is the primary contextual lens through which many historians now view Kennedy's speech.