Is it fair to judge people by their Physical Appearance?

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: No. A person may have a very gruff, rough look but be a very sweet, kind helpful person. Or on the other hand, they could be like a news story I heard. A little old lady, she looked like the nice, sweet grandma that bakes great cookies...she was convicted of embezzlement. So, yeah, not a good idea to judge people by their looks. Hope this helps! If you get more than one answer and see it fit to do so, please mark me Brainliest Answer! Thank you!
Answer 2
Answer: No its not a person might have a wierd looking face but you never know if they're nice or not.

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How might Congressman Tim Huelskamp respond to "Brutus'" statement on natural rights? Answer in a minimum of three complete sentences using supporting evidence from the lesson. (20 points

Suppose you're writing a letter and you recall a word you'd like to use, but you don't know how it's spelled. If you wanted to look up the word in a dictionary, you could use any of the following techniques excepta. Looking up a related word that u can spell in search of clues
b. Looking up the word as you think it's spelled
c. Using the first letter of the word and searching through all th entries under that letter.
d. Writing the word the way you think it's spelled to jog your recall

Answers

a, b, and d are good ways to find the word that you do not remember. All of them can help you. On the contrary, the option c. is not a good way, because you will see that there are too many words in the dictionary starting by any letter. So, the answer to the question is the option c. "Using the first letter of the word and searching through all the entries under that letter" is the answer to the question", which definitely is not a good technique to find the word that you want.

Which sentence has no errors in the use of quotation marks, italics, or underlining?A.


I'm only halfway through the chapter The Laurence Boy.


B.
I'm only halfway through the chapter 'The Laurence Boy.'


C.


I'm only halfway through the chapter The Laurence Boy.


D.


I'm only halfway through the chapter "The Laurence Boy."

Answers

the answer is d the last one

The answer is d because it proper grammar

Which statement tells where a paragraph break should be in this dialogue? "Would you mind dropping this in the mailbox on your way home?" the woman asked. "No problem, Mrs. Daniels," the boy said. "I'd be happy to do so."

A.
A paragraph break should come after the word asked and after the word said.

B.
A paragraph break should come after the word asked.

C.
A paragraph break should come after the word said.

Answers

B. A paragraph break should come after the word asked. Each time a new person starts speaking is a new paragraph.

Is the following more aptly described as a simile or an analogy?"To be able to procure its own entertainments, and to subsist upon its own stock, is not the prerogative of every mind. There are, indeed, understandings so fertile and comprehensive, that they can always feed reflection with new supplies, and suffer nothing from the preclusion of adventitious amusements; as some cities have within their own walls enclosed ground enough to feed their inhabitants in a siege. But others live only from day to day, and must be constantly enabled, by foreign supplies, to keep out the encroachments of languor and stupidity."
—Samuel Johnson

Answers

The main difference of simile and analogy is simile used comparison to make the description more emphatic and vivid ,( example  : Sneaky as a snake, strong as a tank)

We can't find this kind of language on the paragraph above.

So, that paragraph above is more aptly described as an : analogy

hope this helps

Answer:

Analogy

Explanation:

Samuel Johnson is explaining his idea of boredom and to explain it  , he compares the state of being bored with the life in a city. First, he claims that there are people who can get entertained by themselves and , if they happen to get bored with this entertainment, they will bear it and even become reflective. These people have the mental capacity to do so. This is compared to a walled city that has got enough food for her inhabitants in case of a military siege. The walled city refers to the individual who can cope with his own entertainment and boredom, and the food with the mental ability to do so. The same applies to the comparison between people who depend on external factors to set boundaries to their stupid entertaitment or to keep them away from boredom ; and a city which needs foreing supplies to survive.

Among other issues, each of the articles in this module considers how we might respond to the ways that social environments and norms constrain us. About a boy finding that school culture does not value his preferred ways of behaving, David Brooks imagines,In Kindergarten, he’d wonder why he just couldn’t be good. By junior high, he’d lose interest in trying and his grades would plummet.
Then he’d rebel. If the official school culture was über-nurturing, he’d be über-crude. If it valued cooperation and sensitivity, he’d devote his mental energies to violent video games and aggressive music.
In his book’s prologue, “Prelude: The Barbershop,” Vershawn Ashanti Young describes his ambivalence about trying (and failing) to fit in as a “homeboy” and discusses the academic and economic success he eventually chose to pursue. Because of his choices, he reflects, “I didn’t have to fight to get out of the ghetto. I was kicked out.”
And finally, Audre Lorde suggests that people may try at all costs to accommodate socially imposed constraints, writing, “What are the tyrannies you swallow day by day and attempt to make your own, until you will sicken and die of them, still in silence?” Lorde, however, also suggests an alternative to either suffering silently to fit in or rebelling—she encourages listeners and readers to speak out and use language and action to change the social conditions of our lives.
After you have considered Lorde’s question above and the alternative she subsequently proposes, write a speech, a letter (to an individual or organization privately or openly—that is, addressed to an individual but public), or a public service announcement that proposes meaningful change in your community related to the issues raised in these readings. Decide on an audience to address—your classmates; parents; younger (or older) students; coaches; administrators; teachers; church, city, or community officials—and compose an argument both describing a particular “tyrann[y]” or challenge and proposing changes that may improve the lives of those who endure it. Like Butler, Tannen, Brooks, Young, and Lorde, you may use your own or others’ personal experiences (including those of the five authors in this module), hypothetical situations, and reflections to make your case.

Answers

Yup your right this article shows that this is best 

When linking two independent clauses with a conjunctive adverb, a __________ precedes the conjunction.semicolon
comma
colon
period

Answers

Answer:

semicolon

Explanation:

The semicolon is usually the correct punctuation mark to link independent clauses and avoid the mistake called comma splice (i.e., splicing independent clauses as if they were a single clause, resulting in confusing sentences).

Example: Markthought it would be a good idea to bring pizza; however, his wife had entirely different plans.

The two clauses are independent because they each contain a subject (underlined in the example) and a predicate (italicized in the example). The semicolon goes at the end of the first clause, followed by the conjunctive adverb, after which a comma is placed before the second clause.

your will be A) SEMICOLON


hope this helps!!!:)