The central idea is: A job may be perfect for you even though you have trouble finding it.
How can we make this inference?
- the writer states that s/he spent a lot of time preparing for job applications
- throughout the passage, we find hints that finding a job in the industry is challenging. For example the writer states: <em>By the time I began the search for my first full-time job, the job market was in bad shape. During my first few months looking for a job, I sent out countless resumes and only had one interview.</em>
- In the end, the writer is satisfied with the job and finds out that it has positive aspects.
Conclusion: The writer had trouble finding a good job but ultimately found an appropriate one.
Answer:
A, Join in the Fun Run to help a good cause, make friends, and get healthy.
Explanation:
<em>B causes people to have the "if only 75% need to join, why does that mean me?" mindset.</em>
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<em>C causes people to have the "why does that matter it's not me?" mindset.</em>
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<em>D is not a compelling argument to make to a student.</em>
Answer: I think of Hamlet's changes as more of a wavy line--moving up and down--than abrupt turnarounds. After the Ghost speaks to Hamlet, he is steadfast in his desire for revenge, and then he wavers. He gets "proof" that Claudius did, indeed murder the king--and then he wavers. The soliloquies are, indeed, the evidence of those waverings.
Explanation: :)
Answer:
1. Titanic was difficult to locate in part because it was submerged in some of the world's deepest waters.
2. The Titanic was found in three locations in parts at a depth of 3840 meters (12,600 feet).
Explanation:
It laid unfound for 73 years because of the depth and different locations.