Chris' inability to forsee problems contributed to his death. He thought he was prepared, but he wasn't. His ignorance about the condition of the Teklanika, his insistence on visiting “uncharted territory,” by not brining a map, meant that once he was ready, mentally and emotionally, to leave, he physically could not. Thus, although he did not purposely mean to take his life (some believe it was sui cide), it comes down to the fact he was ignorant, ill prepared, and should have predicted he would need more than the few supplies he brought with him. Thus, he was responsible for his own death...... an unfortunate and very sad ending to a very young life.
Answer:
Without the ketchup is the relative clause.
You know that because if you take it out of the sentence, the sentence still makes sense.
Answer:
PLEASE GIVE BRAINLIST
“The Last Lecture,” Randy Pausch Why does Pausch talk about football? He wants to tell the audience that he did not achieve all of his goals. He wants to let the audience know that mastering the basics is key to achieving goals. ... He wants the audience to try playing football so they can enjoy a similar experience.
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Oh my lord almost the entire thing is a series of devises, especially irony.
A very obvious example you'd be advised not to use: the irony of Romeo's sacrifice, drinking the poison to be with his love, only to be the cause of her demise. Very poetic.
Another example of irony: The Montague's and Capulet's determination to keep their children safe from the other family, only to drive them both to their graves through increasingly hateful acts.
Honestly the entire story is riddled with irony. Pick a situation where a character makes a choose that ends up doing the oppositite of what they intended.
well since they deleted my answer, you're on your own kid. Goggle it, you will find the answer right away.