Answer:
I think the answer is B or C
Hi, you've asked an incomplete question. It seems you are likely referring to the online article, The complicated legacy of the Pilgrims by Peter C. Mancall, Andrew W. Mellon Professor of the Humanities, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences on the actively learn website.
<u>Explanation:</u>
1. The first misconception occurs when we are told that even though many American students have been taught to believe that the Compact signed by the pilgrims was <em>"a stepping stone toward self-government, a defining feature of American constitutional democracy.
"</em> it isn't actually the case, the article explains why,
<em> "After all, self-governing communities existed across Indigenous New England long before European migrants arrived...So </em><em>American self-government</em><em>, however one defines it, was </em><em>not</em><em> born in Plymouth."</em>
<em>2. </em>Another misconception was that the Pilgrims showed kindness and love towards the indigenous people they met, For example, we are told that in 1802, "the future President John Quincy Adams" referring to the pilgrims said, <em>"shown “kindness and equity toward the savages.” </em>However, William Bradford another observer said about the land, <em>“a hideous and desolate wilderness, full of wild beasts and wild men.”</em>
Moreover, the article further says,<em> "...colonists slaughtered Indigenous people on the banks of the Mystic River." </em>This alludes to the fact that there was a very little period of kindness amongst the Pilgrims and the indigenous people they met.
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Answer:
<h2>Sadako spent a lot of her time in the hospital writing letters to her friends in school and reading books. After a few weeks, a girl named Kiyo was </h2><h2>also admitted to the hospital. </h2><h2>She was to be Sadako's roommate.</h2>
Explanation:
<h2>______________________________</h2>
<h2>
<em><u>PLEASE</u></em><em><u> MARK</u></em><em><u> ME</u></em><em><u> BRAINLIEST</u></em><em><u> AND</u></em><em><u> FOLLOW</u></em><em><u> M</u></em><em><u> E</u></em><em><u> AND</u></em><em><u> SOUL</u></em><em><u> DARLING</u></em><em><u> TEJASWINI</u></em><em><u> SINHA</u></em><em><u> HERE</u></em><em><u> ❤️</u></em></h2>
Answer: I tried my best
Explanation:
Stargirl is the most "manic pixie dream girl" who ever pixie-dreamgirl-ed. She's practically the prototype. She's the Alpha and Omega of the cliche, coined by critic Nathan Rabin in his review of 2005's "Elizabethtown." Stargirl dresses eccentrically, she carries around a ukulele, and her pet rat lives in her knapsack. She drifts above the rituals and pressures of high school, communing on a higher and much wiser plane. She exists in order to change the lives of others for the better. As seen through the eyes of Leo, a shy kid who only wants to fit in, she is nothing less than a Magical Creature. He believes she can actually make it rain. And maybe she can. There's something uncanny about Stargirl.