He is lucky and almost always wins his bets.
FYI - Simon Wheeler does not suggest to the stranger that they bet on his frog. Simon Wheeler is the one telling the story about Jim Smiley and his frog Dan'l Webster. Dan'l Webster is the frog that is a great jumper so it's a good bet. However, the stranger fills Dan'l Webster with shot so he can't jump high and Smiley loses the bet.
With the exception of option A, all sentences are written in imperatives (verb structure used for instructions and/or oders) Therefore, in these examples, the <em>call to action</em> is explicit, not implicit. Your best answer is option A because, apart from the fact that it's the only viable one, here you have a persuasive example by consensus. Simply put, instead of telling you directly to do something, it's telling you that everyone is doing it, which is likely to make you want to do it if you want to be like them.
The "An instructor has asked a black college student to write a creative paper about who he is" sentence best describes the dramatic situation of Langston Hughes’s poem “Theme for English B”. "Theme for English B" is a poem written by Langston Hughes about a challenge faced by a student in writing his essay about who he is. This poem published in 1951.
The answer for #1 is B. a type of sail. And for #2 the answer is A. royal or noble characters who face a series of mysterious tests.
<span>B. We were walking by the lake when we heard a siren.
C. By the time I graduated, I had attended three different high schools.
D. Though he had been rude at first, Rupert eventually won over the congregation
These three sentences are all correct, because even if the verb tense shifts it still makes sense within the context of the situation.</span>