Ok so i will name them off as on 1-6. top is 1 2 3, and bottom is 4 5 6. ok
Glossary: 4
Dictionary: 2 & 6
Thesaurus: 3 & 5
Online Encyclopedia: 1
Yes they still do a date is a date
<span>One needs to look now farther than the first paragraph to realize that Vonnegut's tale is laced with irony and satire. The strongest hint is when he mentions that there are over 100 ammendments in the Constitution. All these ammendments are designed to make society "perfect." Later on George and his wife Hazel are discussing how George's handicaps, the bags of birdshot tied to his legs, are terribly inconvenient and painful. Hazel suggests George break a law and remove the bags since he isn't competing against anyone at home. George replies that if he broke the law so would others and they'd end up right back in the "Dark Ages". These examples depict there is no such thing as a perfect society. Equality (in looks, strength, intelligence, etc.) does not bring about perfection and competition is essential for a thriving economy. In every society there are winners and losers. There is no way around that.</span>
Answer:
Generations, like people, have personalities, and Millennials — the American teens and twenty-somethings who are making the passage into adulthood at the start of a new millennium — have begun to forge theirs: confident, self-expressive, liberal, upbeat and open to change.
Explanation:
Answer:
antonym
Explanation:
These words are all <u>opposite one another</u>. Antonyms are the words that oppose each other and <u>have completely contrasting meanings to one another.</u> <u>Therefore, these words are antonyms. </u>
<em>Dissolve </em>means for something to break up, and usually to become liquid. <em>Solidify </em>is the word that marks the process of something getting into the solid-state or hardening. These words therefore <u>show the two completely opposing processes. </u>
<em>Noise </em>is the loud or unpleasant sound, an unwanted one. <em>Silence </em>is the complete absence of any sound. Again, we see that<u> these words describe the two contrasting states of sound.</u>