Answer:
This is your English Teacher, stop using this website for answers, i will email youre guardians about this, and the whole classes to re-assure they dont use this!
Explanation:
Learn from now on, common sense.
Answer:
True
Explanation:
The question is basically asking: "True or false: Pre-Columbian art and culture was produced in the Americas before the arrival of Christopher Columbus".
This statement is true. As can be seen from the name of this art movement / art type, it's called "Pre-Columbian". "Pre" means before, so essentially, the name says that the art and culture is "before Columbus", making the statement correct.
Hope this helps!
In Flowers for Algernon, Charlie and Algernon are both connected. Algernon was the first to "become smart," and Charlie followed. The reader knows from the beginning that their fates are intertwined; what happens to Algernon happens, at some point, to Charlie.
Algernon and Charlie both had their intelligence increased, and both became abnormally intelligent. Algernon and Charlie enjoy a bond that is both a deep connection and a symbolic relationship. In a literary sense, Algernon symbolizes Charlie.
As Charlie becomes smarter, he sees the connection as well. He understands that Algernon's behavior foreshadows his own fate. Therefore, when Algernon's behavior alters, Charlie knows that it is more than likely to happen to him as well. Thankfully, Charlie is so smart at this point that he is in a position to try and delay any changes from happening to himself. That's why he begins to work so intensely. With his great mind, Charlie is attempting to find any way he can to stop the changes from occurring within his own mind.
Sadly, of course, Charlie learns that it is not possible. His great intelligence could not save him from his fate, a fate that mirrors that of Algernon. Both were allowed only a brief moment of glory, despite the best efforts of those who tried to make this brief moment last.
Is this a true or false question? If it is I think that it is true but im not positive.