C.
Laissez-faire leaders have an attitude of trust and reliance on their employees. They don't micromanage or get too involved, they don't give too much instruction or guidance
The correct answer is the Exodus.
That word literally means - the exit. So obviously it represents a sort of an ending of something, in this case, a play. The Prologue is in the beginning of a play, and episodes and stasimons are in the middle - episodes are events, and stasimons are poems/songs.
<span>In 'Fahrenheit 451', Beatty tells Montag that the decline of books started during the Civil War era. In that time, radio and television became a big thing, and books were less interesting to the general public. People started wanting to know quick news, celebrity gossip, and about the entertaining things that were going on. They became less interested in books. Books became of less quality, and education declined. He also went on to discuss how different authors disagreed with each other, especially on the war, and therefore, the solution was found to get rid of books. The reaction of his explanation is that people would rather have exciting information whether it was true or not than engage in learning through reading a book. They like to do the least amount of work possible in order to amuse themselves.</span>
Hello!
Topic sentences express the main idea of paragraphs, states the main point the writer wishes to make, and is usually the first sentence in a paragraph.
The sentence in this paragraph which meets all of the above criteria: <span>Writing is difficult because so many skills are involved.
This sentence states the main idea, lets us know what the author is trying to say, and is the first sentence of the paragraph--all the things we expect topic sentences to do.
I hope this helps you!</span>
Answer:
Garrett Augustus Morgan, Sr. was an African-American inventor, businessman, and community leader. His most notable inventions were a three-position traffic signal and a smoke hood notably used in a 1916 tunnel construction disaster rescue.
Born: March 4, 1877, Paris, KY
Died: July 27, 1963, Cleveland, OH
Spouse: Mary Anne Hassek (m. 1908–1963)
Children: Cosmo Henry Morgan, John Pierpont Morgan, Garrett Augustus Morgan, Jr.
Parents: Sydney Morgan, Elizabeth Reed
Siblings: Frank Morgan
Explanation:
hope this was good enough.