The symbol of the stones affects the meaning in this passage, By symbolizing the boy’s journey and the choices he will make, the stones remind the boy to pay attention to the omens. Thus, option "A" is correct.
He stuck his hand into the pouch and felt around for one of the stones. As he did so, both of them pushed through a hole in the pouch and fell to the ground. The boy had never even noticed that there was a hole in his pouch.
He knelt down to find Urim and Thummim and put them back in the pouch. But as he saw them lying there on the ground, another phrase came to his mind.
Thus, option "A" is correct.
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Answer:
A: By instructing the Englishman to go and try, the Englishman is motivated to continue on his journey toward his Personal Legend.
Answer:
One camel driver’s story about olive trees and loss teaches Santiago that he has to let go of his fear to realize his true destiny.
Explanation:
When Santiago is travelling with a caravan through the desert in The Alchemist, he befriends a camel driver. The driver eventually tells Santiago his own story. We learn that the driver had a successful olive orchard, and was satisfied with his life. However, one day a flood destroyed his land, forcing him to become a camel driver. The story about loss convinces Santiago that one cannot be afraid of losing anything if one wants to achieve one's own true destiny.
I think drama doesn't really help with cooperating but if you think about it in another way then it kind of does the reason why I say this is because me and my best friend always have drama well we did but to this day in middle school we don't and the reason why we don't is because she knows my bad side and I know hers and we don't do anything to get each other mad .
hope this can help xxxx
Answer:
The correct answer is actually the second one: the realization that the prosperity of the past was completely gone and very unlikely to return.
Explanation:
"Brother, Can You Spare a Dime" is a song that was composed by E.Y "Yip" Harburg and Jay Gorney, in 1930, and it was based on a lullaby that Gorney had known from his childhood. It was also highly criticized as it was seen by Republicans as an antti-capitalist propaganda. In an interview, one of the song´s creators, Gorney, explained himself the origin and reason for their song and he himself said that it was meant as a means to make Americans think about the situation of people who had lost it all, even after having given it all to their country, in benefit of their country, and were now ignored by their people. These were his exact words: "I didn´t want a song to depress people. I wanted to write a song to make people think. It isn´t a hand-me-out song of "give me a dime, I´m starving, I´m bitter." It wasn´t that kind of sentimentality." (Jay Gorney).