Answer:
Check screenshot
Explanation:
In the footnote of the attachment
Answer:
My grandmother died on 4.11.20 because of the corona virus and pneumonia.She had been through so much from fighting off cancer cells,losing her right leg,she had been in the hospital so much. All i could do the day she died was cry, but i also laughed a little thinking about all the good times we had. Like that one time when she was sick and i was sad that she couldn't come spend Christmas with us but she surprised us and was waiting for us in the house when we got home from school. And i ran up to her and hugged her so tight.Or when we always got up early in the morning and would go on the balcony to watch the sun come up while she was drinking her coffee and i have my hot cocoa. My grandma was like my best friend, i could tell her anything and got get judged because of my past. She always made me happy and laugh all the time. We gave each other life. I wish i could have told her that i loved her, and my final goodbyes.But heaven couldn't wait for her.But now i just think about how its OK that she has passed, because she has gone home and now she is finally at peace and she doesn't have to deal with all the pain.She is finally at ease, and for that i am grateful. I hope this could help u.
Answer:
1. Which literary term best reflects this passage?
ANS: explicit meaning
2. Which of the following is another term for schema ?
ANS: metacognition
please mark as brainliest
I assume you are referring to his 1914 Address to Congress. His chief evidence is that America is composed of people of diverse origins and ancestry. So, while some citizens would want one side to win, others would want another. That would create a fatal division and discord among American citizens, whose main interests should be on the side of their present homeland, that is the U.S. Basically, Wilson wants to say that he doesn't profess neutrality on behalf of his own, as a statesman and a decision maker; he professes it on behalf of American citizens and their common interest.
"<span>Such divisions amongst us would be fatal to our peace of mind and might seriously stand in the way of the proper performance of our duty as the one great nation at peace, the one people holding itself ready to play a part of impartial mediation and speak the counsels of peace and accommodation, not as a partisan, but as a friend." - this is the strongest evidence presented in the speech. It refers to possible consequences of America's taking sides in this conflict.</span>