PLS MARK BRAINLIEST
Understanding that it was composed that long prior encourages me place it into point of view and perceive that ladies in those days had far less rights than current circumstances. It additionally causes me comprehend the opening location when she alludes to "mediocre ladies." Because she was a duchess and a portion of the others display were likewise of the gentry, she is basically tending to normal people, not attempting to affront them. Since this content came so ahead of schedule in the ladies' rights development, I can perceive how her message is to start making others mindful of the issue, as opposed to attempting to give an answer.
<span>Capital gains are the money that an investor earns by buying and selling a stock. Specifically, it is the gain (or loss) that the investor makes by selling the stock. Capital gains can be calculated by subtracting purchase price from the selling price of the stock. An example of this would be if Bob buys a stock for $20 and then a year later sells the stock for $30. His capital gains would be $10 (selling price minus purchase price).</span>
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Unfortunately, you did not attach the text or the excerpt to know what those lines say.
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The words and phrases that the author uses describing the motives of Juvencio, when he killed Don Lupe, reveals that Juvencio has no remorse for what he did because it was not for personal reasons. It was for "business reasons." This sounds ironic because, in the end, he killed, but deep in Juvencio´s mind there is a difference between personal reasons and a decision that is forced for "business purposes."
Juvencio says DonLuped did not allow him to pasture his animals in Don Lupe's field. And that was necessary for the animals to survive and feed Juvencio.
Mexican writer Juan Rulfo is the author of the story "Tell Them Not to Kill Me."
The rhyme schemes of the sonnet follow two basic patterns. (1) The Italian sonnet (also called the Petrarchan sonnet after the most influential of the Italian sonneteers) comprises an 8-line 'octave' of two quatrains, rhymed abbaabba, followed by a 6-line 'sestet' usually rhymed cdecde or cdcdcd. So false
Years ago..........................