Answer:
Claim: Children need to be frightened. We all do. It’s an emotion that was given to all of us and it should be exercised. When you don’t exercise it, you lose your sense of fear.
Counterargument: A lot of people have told me I really shouldn’t tell children scary things.
Rebuttal: Well, children can frighten themselves without your help. When they’re alone in bed they hear things and they see things. So I just help them along.
Explanation:
It is often thought that children need to be frightened. However, what this argument fails to consider is that Torrence grew up listening to scary tales from her grandfather and therefore has adapted to fear. In the text, it says that Torrence was afraid of keyholes because her grandfather told her in the dark monsters would lock her there. This shows at some point the author herself changed in the way she thought about scary tales but only because someone else scared her. Although children can frighten themselves without scary tales it is of their own volition. This means that children, either way, will never lose their sense of fear as a personal experience. Scary tales teaches one to be more cautious.
b. mold; it
c. mold,
d. mold-
period
question mark
exclamation point <-My Answer
comma
2.
period<-My Answer
question mark
exclamation point
comma
3.
period
question mark<-My Answer
exclamation point
comma
Answer: 1) Exclamation point; 2) Period; 3) Question mark.
Explanation: The first sentence consists only of the word "wow," so it is an obvious case of exclamation. "It must be a Hercules beetle" is a statement expressing an inference, so it should end with a period, and in the last sentence, the form "Did you know" clearly belongs to a question, so the question mark must be at the end.
Independent Clause
Dependent Clause
Phrase
List and describe three other concepts that you think would be enhanced by cross-disciplinary learning (outside of the Harlem Renaissance – can be other subjects, too).
focal point of earthly depravation
focal point of man's low sinful state
contrast for evaluation of one's own spiritual properties
Answer:
The Rectangle is an area surrounded by saloons in the novel In His Steps. The area is the focal point of earthly depravation, and of man's low, sinful state. It also serves as a contrast for the evaluation of one's own spiritual properties.
In His Steps is a religious, fictional novel written by Charles Monroe Sheldon. The book is one of the best-selling books of all time.