1. Turning her back to the class , she bagan writing on the board
2. Having been hit in the neck by a spitball , Jamie bent down to pick it up
3. Smiling her sunniest smile , she addressed the class.
4. (didnt understand the sentence/didn't make sense to me)
5. The car came equipped with power steering , air-conditioning bucket seats , and new tires.
6. He jumped out of bed , cleaned his teeth , had a shower , ate breakfast , and then went to school.
7. The doctor had treated patients who suffered from , hepatitis , chickenpox , measles , the mumps , and glandular fever.
Answer:
The reason someone would add more lines to Romeo and Juliet's death would be to make it more dramatic and interesting. Therefore more people would be interested and read it.
Explanation:
Answer:
The author uses a third-person omniscient to help the readers visualize the challenges and hardships the miners faced.
Evidence:
I read this story about 2 weeks ago, but from what I recall, there's a whole paragraph in the beginning of the excerpt describing the miner's condition when they stepped off the boat.
Malala is a Pakistani education advocate who, at the age of 17, became the youngest person to win the Nobel Peace Prize after surviving an assassination attempt by the Taliban. Surviving a shot to the head, Malala now travels all over the world to speak out on the importance of education for women. She has published her own book, I Am Malala, and won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014.
“I raise up my voice-not so I can shout but so that those without a voice can be heard...we cannot succeed when half of us are held back.” -Malala
Noor Inayat Khan
Nicknamed The Spy Princess, Noor was a descendant of Indian royalty raised in Britain and France. The elite Special Operations Executive recruited her in 1942 to work as a radio operator because of her bilingual abilities. Serving as a spy during World War II, she faced imprisonment, torture, and was eventually killed at Dachau concentration camp. Considered a British heroin of World War II, a statue of her is located in Gordon Square Gardens, London, to commemorate her bravery and service.