Write one paragraph about the things that make you stressed and how you deal with these things

Answers

Answer 1
Answer:

Answer:

 School, family, and friends are the things that make me stress a lot. I usually stay quiet and not say a word. But when I do, my family/friends think I'm being a drama queen, and that causes more stress. So, I deal with these things by myself. I try to relax, get some alone time, and forget all my problems. I've learned that stress causes headaches, so I try to clam down and not stress out a lot.

  I always make sure that I can at least have a few minutes alone, to clam down and relax. Most of the time, I listen to calming music and breathe in and out. I've been stressing a lot these days, so this is the time I stay silence. But, I've always found a way to relax and not think of the world's expectations of me, but instead think about my expectations of myself.


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PLEASE HURRY !! Read the two passages from A Raisin in the Sun. Passage 1: LINDNER: You see—in the face of all the things I have said, we are prepared to make your family a very generous offer . . . BENEATHA: Thirty pieces and not a coin less! LINDNER (putting on his glasses and drawing a form out of the briefcase): Our association is prepared, through the collective effort of our people, to buy the house from you at a financial gain to your family. RUTH: Lord have mercy, ain't this the living gall! WALTER: All right, you through? LINDNER: Well, I want to give you the exact terms of the financial arrangement— WALTER: We don't want to hear no exact terms of no arrangements. I want to know if you got any more to tell us 'bout getting together? LINDNER (taking off his glasses): Well—I don't suppose that you feel . . . WALTER: Never mind how I feel—you got any more to say 'bout how people ought to sit down and talk to each other? . . . Get out of my house, man. Passage 2: WALTER: Ain't nothing the matter with us. We just telling you 'bout the gentleman who came to see you this afternoon. From the Clybourne Park Improvement Association. MAMA: What he want? RUTH (in the same mood as BENEATHA and WALTER): To welcome you, honey. WALTER: He said they can't hardly wait. He said the one thing they don't have, that they just dying to have out there is a fine family of fine colored people! (To RUTH and BENEATHA.) Ain't that right! RUTH (mockingly): Yeah! He left his card— BENEATHA (handing card to MAMA): In case. MAMA reads and throws it on the floor—understanding and looking off as she draws her chair up to the table on which she has put her plant and some sticks and some cord. MAMA: Father, give us strength. (Knowingly—and without fun.) Did he threaten us? BENEATHA: Oh—Mama—they don't do it like that anymore. He talked Brotherhood. He said everybody ought to learn how to sit down and hate each other with good Christian fellowship. She and WALTER shake hands to ridicule the remark. MAMA (sadly): Lord, protect us . . . RUTH: You should hear the money those folks raised to buy the house from us. All we paid and then some. BENEATHA: What they think we going to do—eat 'em? RUTH: No, honey, marry 'em. MAMA (shaking her head): Lord, Lord, Lord . . . Which lines of dialogue develop the idea that racially charged confrontations can have a sudden and unpleasant impact?
Select three options.

"I don't suppose that you feel"
"Ain’t this the living gall!"
"They don't do it like that anymore."
“All we paid and then some.”
"Lord, Lord, Lord . . ."

Answers

Answer:

"Ain’t this the living gall!"

"They don't do it like that anymore."

"Lord, Lord, Lord . . ."

Explanation:

These are the three options that develop the idea that racially charged confrontations can have a sudden and unpleasant impact. In the first case, the phrase "Ain’t this the living gall!" describes Ruth's reaction at facing this type of confrontation. She is amazed at seeing the lengths people will go to in order to avoid relationships with black people. The phrase "They don't do it like that anymore" describes how conflicts between white and black people have changed, but continue to be present. Finally, the phrase "Lord, Lord, Lord . . ." describes Mama's reaction at the awareness of being involved in this sort of conflict.

Answer:

"Ain’t this the living gall!"

"They don't do it like that anymore."

"Lord, Lord, Lord . . ."

Explanation:

Read this excerpt from Exploring the Titanic.Soon I had spent more hours in the deep ocean than any other scientist. But the Titanic continued to haunt me. My oceanographic colleagues scoffed at my Titanic dreams and told me I should devote myself to "real" scientific projects.

Colleagues are

subjects in a science experiment.
friends who have different interests.
fellow workers in the same field of study.
family members who support each other.

Answers

Answer:

C- fellow workers in the same field of study

Explanation:

just took the test got a 90 but that's the correct answer

Answer:

c. fellow workers in the same field of study.

Explanation:

Will mark BRAINLIEST if the RIGHT ANSWER is correct!!!

Answers

B. Some may Suggest that this belief is a little too optimistic.

The correct answer is a.

Essay on 'Small act of kindness can make a big difference'

Answers


 
 
                                                        Kind Acts

I remember a timewhen things went downhill for me.  It wasin third year high school when my grades went down and I was grounded at a timewhen a time when there was something important that I wanted to do.  Worse still, someone I liked had feelings forsomeone else.  It was during that sadmoment that someone took the time console me and cheered me up.  That simple act of kindness helped me throughthe times and proved to me that a little kindness goes a long way.
A kind act can have a powerful and inspiring effect onpeople down on their luck.  Many times wehear stories of people who stumbled then rose out of the ashes.  This was due to acts of kindness such asbuying someone a meal when they are hungry or helping them pack theirbelongings or simply being there in times of sorrow and tragedy as a shoulderto lean on. Simple gestures like that give hope when we feel that there isnone.  We realize that people care andare there when we need them.It doesn’t have to be great deed.  Just a simple gesture with the purest ofintentions can work wonders for those in despair.  Their feel that that they are not alone andthat there is always someone who cares and that is food for the hungrysoul.  A little kindness goes a long wayand many people who felt now lead better lives today. 

Which of the following is true for sentences that have more than one clause?A. There can be only one negative word in the whole sentence, even if there are two clauses.
B. There can be one negative word per clause.
C. There can be two negative words per clause.
D. There should never be more than one negative word in a sentence.

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The statement that is true for sentence that have more than one clause is that, there can be one negative word per clause. If a sentence has more than two clauses, then each clause can have one negative word. But double negatives in one clause is grammatically wrong.

What does the audience learn about Odysseus from his encounter with his shipmates Elpenor and his mother Anticlea in Book 11?

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Odysseus' mother Anticlea died of her grieving, waiting on Odysseus' return. She missed her son so much that she died of grief and yearning. In one movie adaption, she commits suicide by walking into the sea.