This comes from the novel “<em><u>Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy</u></em>” written by <u>Gary Schmidt </u>and is about how Turner, the son of a reverend, had to move with his family to Phippsburg, where he met Lizzie, a black girl who lived on an island where former slaves live. He was not happy living there at first but with Lizzie he had a good time.
Question: What aspect of Phippsburg contributes to Turner’s internal conflict at this point in the story?
Answer: A. The town is very small, and everybody can observe and comment on what Turner is doing.
All of the guests HAD gone to the concert in the park.
(But I think it could also be have, if you are talking about it happening in the present).
Apple is to tree as grape is to vine.
Hair = simile
apples = generalization
He wants people to support him. He sought to emphasize the historic nature of the events at Pearl Harbor, implicitly urging the American people never to forget the attack and memorialize its date.
Answer: hardy
Explanation: Notice how all the words are kind of similar. Active, spry, and capable all have similar definitions in that all three are synonyms of active. Now, hardy means to survive in difficult conditions. So therefore, it concludes in that hardy is the best definition that makes the most sense.