Foulest crime in history

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: oj simpson
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Related Questions

An essay on "Welfare of my society depends on my well being"
A scientist noticed that a dark-colored peppered moth is more visible on a light-colored background than a light-colored peppered moth. He wonders, “Does this difference in visibility affect the survival rate of dark moths?” Which part of the scientific method does he need to carry out next
How might a news source's coverage of a presidential speech provide less accurate information than a personal reading of the speech's transcript?
Why does the boy in Manuel Rojas's " The Glass of Milk" learn by the story's end? A. A man can find work easily. B. There is no way to pay a debt of gratitude.C. There is no shame in needing help.D. A man must fend for himself.
Who ends up being the most king like man in the Hobbit?A. The flag bearer B. The messenger to Thorin C. Bard D. The master of lake-town

What is the climax of this story

Answers

Answer:

The climax of that story is that robots appeared in Kellans room.

Explanation:

The climax is the action of the story. Like when your telling a scary story and things start to get good.

Do you think its wise for scientists not to accept a theory immediately, even if the theory hasa lot of evidence to support it?

Answers

Each scientists have there own opinion. Some accept theories and some have to have facts.

How many words long should a reflective be?

Answers

I would say about 4 sentences or 250 words.
A reflective essay should reach a capacity of 250 words.

How might “Moctezuma II” have been different if the author chose to write the story of Moctezuma’s imprisonment as a poem?

Answers

Moctezuma II had been a sonnet, there would have not been as much detail in the example, and the sonnet would have been long and off-kilter, and elements of the story would have become mixed up in the organization.

What is the central idea of the poem?

In the event that it would have been a sonnet rather than a story, such a lot of enumerating of the example could not have possibly been conceivable and the length of the sonnet would have been extremely lengthy.

If rather than a story, the writer would have composed the detainment of Moctezuma II as a sonnet, it wouldn't had been a decent sonnet in light of the fact that the specific explanation of the detainment of the ruler was not exceptionally clear so it would have been an obstacle for choosing the subject of the sonnet.

Besides, the specifying that are conceivable in the story doesn't become conceivable in the sonnet a few times in light of the fact that the words and the rhyming plan makes it somewhat hard to teach everything in the sonnet which is conceivable in the story.

Concluding the subject of the sonnet would have been troublesome on the grounds that the explanation of detainment was not exceptionally clear.

For more information about Moctezuma II, refer the following link:

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Answer:

If "Moctezuma II" had been a poem, there would have not been as much detail in the lesson, and the poem would have been long and awkward, and features of the story would have gotten lost in the format.

Explanation:

Respond in a paragraph, answer is written in complete sentences. Answer: First we should know that both of these poet's had a bad experience in their lives, suffering similarly under tyranny and oppression during World War II, which shaped their perspective in very different ways. Milosz is the one that took it very personally and considered his life as emotionally destroyed while Szymborska looked at it as another chance at life that might never be given again. It is clear that the poet that addresses death in terms of the times they live in and as a threat of fascism is Milosz. This is apparent in the poem “City Without A Name”.
Does this sound good?

Answers

Answer:

Yes, but here are some suggested edits.

Explanation:

The most important point to highlight is the fact that both poets endured lives of suffering, tyranny, and oppression during World War II. These experiences shaped their perspective in very different ways.

Milosz took the affronts and misfortunes very personally and considered them to have emotionally destroyed his life. Szymborska, on the other hand, saw in his survival and endurance another chance at life which might never again be given to him.

It is Milosz who addresses death in terms of the time in which he lived and and in an analogous manner to the threat of fascism. The nature of this influence is apparent in the poem ''City Without A Name''.

Answer:

Personally, I think it sounds good with a few exceptions.

Explanation:

Your answer is about a hundred words and I would put it at about an 11th or 12th grade essay. However, I would add a comma at the very beginning after the word "first", and I would remove the apostrophe in the word "poets". (also in the first sentence) Other than that, I think it is an excellent essay.

How are the operating room in the Williams story and the atom-splitting lab in the Fermi story alike? A.
They are both places where medical breakthroughs occur.

B.
They are both places where major conflicts occur.

C.
They are both places of great excitement.

D.
They are both places where top-secret work is done.

Answers

Both Williams story and Fermi's story are alike in that:

A) They are both places where medical breakthroughs occur.

Fermi, in his lab attempted to replicate Marie Curie's radioactivity in the heavier elements after bombarding them with neutrons.

Other Questions
Read the passage from Animal Farm.When it was all over, the remaining animals, except for the pigs and dogs, crept away in a body. They were shaken and miserable. They did not know which was more shocking—the treachery of the animals who had leagued themselves with Snowball, or the cruel retribution they had just witnessed. In the old days there had often been scenes of bloodshed equally terrible, but it seemed to all of them that it was far worse now that it was happening among themselves. Since Jones had left the farm, until today, no animal had killed another animal. Not even a rat had been killed. They had made their way on to the little knoll where the half-finished windmill stood, and with one accord they all lay down as though huddling together for warmth—Clover, Muriel, Benjamin, the cows, the sheep, and a whole flock of geese and hens—everyone, indeed, except the cat, who had suddenly disappeared just before Napoleon ordered the animals to assemble. For some time nobody spoke. Only Boxer remained on his feet. He fidgeted to and fro, swishing his long black tail against his sides and occasionally uttering a little whinny of surprise. Finally he said:"I do not understand it. I would not have believed that such things could happen on our farm. It must be due to some fault in ourselves. The solution, as I see it, is to work harder. From now onwards I shall get up a full hour earlier in the mornings."Which literary device does Orwell most use to support his purpose in this passage?A. point of view, to show how the characters perceive the bloodshed they have witnessedB.setting, to show that the unfinished windmill may be the cause of the revenge takenC. allegory, to show how the murders on the farm are similar to the murders ordered by StalinD. satire, to poke fun at the shocked responses to the executions occurring on the farm