1 - gain audience's sympathy
2 - appeal to audience's logical sense
3 - to refute any argument for reconciliation
4 - to show willingness to defend
Answer:
B taking care of the animals is the Best way to show kindness
Answer:
This scene develops plot of the story because:-
Option D: This scene introduces the reader to the narrator and to the Duvitches.
Explanation:
"The Strangers That Came To Town" by "Ambrose Flack" is a story of the Duvitch family.
People of Syringa Street do not treat Duvitches nicely. They consider them as untouchables and avoid them. The whole town looks down upon them and have a prejudice about them.Towards the end of the story, residents start accepting Duvitches as regular residents and understand their truth. They welcome them with respect.
In the given lines, Duvitches are introduced in the story as they came in the truck and how people looked at them strangely with mixed emotions. So, statement D is the most apt.
Even if it doesn’t look like it, all living things constantly interact with their environment. For
instance, every time you take a breath, you get oxygen from the air, and every time you
breathe back out, you release carbon dioxide into the world around you. Both oxygen and
carbon dioxide are vital gases that different organisms can use. You, a human, need the
oxygen for energy and need to get rid of the carbon dioxide, because it’s a waste matter.
Just like us, all other organisms take something from their environment while putting waste back
into it. When several kinds of organisms interact with each other in one particular area, it’s called
an ecosystem. In the forest, living beings (plants, animals, insects, fungi and bacteria) all interact
with each other and with the soil and water to form the forest’s specific kind of ecosystem.
So, how does it work? Every organism in the forest can be put in one of three categories.
Depending on which category they’re in, they’ll interact with each other and the forest’s
resources in a different way. The categories are producer, decomposer and consumer. Let’s
look at each one.
Producers are living things that can make their own energy out of non‐living resources all
around them like, oxygen and water. They’re also known as autotrophs. Autotrophs do not
need to kill anything in order to eat. Plants and algae, for example, are producers. In the
forest’s ecosystem, the trees, shrubs and moss are all producers. They turn water and sunlight
into the energy they need to live and grow, through a process called photosynthesis. And
remember that carbon dioxide you expelled as waste matter? Well, for plants, carbon dioxide
is a vital gas. It is used to help aid with the process of photosynthesis.