I think he would have advised him to leave while can and
speak out. The fact that someone called
his name meant that he was caught. He
speaker had already witnessed much sorrow and pain from war and other problems. Eventually they came for the speaker and
there was no one there for him. “Then they came for me—and no one left to speak
for me.”
Answer:
“No one knows when chimps and humans first came into contact, <em><u>but it seems certain </u></em>that Africans have long interacted with chimps.”
Explanation:
Answer:
Alice follows the White Rabbit down the passage into a large room.
Alice cannot unlock the doors in the passage with the key, so she so she searches for another way out.
Alice finds a small door behind a curtain which she unlocks, but it is too small for her to fit inside.
Alice finds a bottle which says "Drink Me," but reads it carefully before deciding to take any action.
Explanation:
Lewis Carroll's children’s fantasy story <em>Alice's Adventures in Wonderland</em> tells the story of a young girl named Alice and her adventures through the fairy-land of Wonderland. This book remains one of the most famous and read books of children fiction.
The given events are from the first chapter of the novel. While Alice and her sister were sitting on the riverbank when she saw a White Rabbit hopping along, checking its watch and hurrying along as if it was late for something. <u>Alice follows the rabbit and fell through the rabbit hole into a huge passageway with huge halls with numerous doors</u>. She couldn't open anyone of them and was curious to know what lies beyond those doors. Then she <u>saw a golden key on a three-legged table made of solid glass and tried to open the doors with it. But the key wouldn't fit in the locks </u>for they were too big for the tiny golden key.
Desperate for another way out, she <u>discovered a small door behind a curtain. When she tried the tiny key, it fitted and opened the door but she couldn't get through because she was too big for the tiny door</u>. Then she <u>saw a bottle that says "Drink me" which she did</u>, but not before carefully checking it for poison or something else.
Answer:
The answers are:
It includes over forty thousand definitions.
It offers excerpted examples of the words in literature.
Explanation:
<em>Samuel Johnson's </em>"A Dictionary of the English Language" was regarded as the best dictionary of its day. It was published in 1755, thus this makes the first choice (It was published in the late 1800s) incorrect.
I<u>t has around 42,773 words with their meanings</u>, thus this makes the second choice (It includes over forty thousand definitions) correct. The dictionary which "only" contained 40,000 words was prepared by <em>Nathan Bailey.</em>
The dictionary only shows the<u> meaning of the words and "not their origin."</u> Thus, this makes the third choice (It includes information about word origin) incorrect.
The meaning of the words are illustrated with the help of quotations (excerpts) relating to literature. So, this makes the last choice (It offers excerpted examples of the words in literature) correct. Examples of the quotations comes from Shakespeare, Dryden and Milton.
However, the dictionary doesn't have a preface written by William Shakespeare. Thus, this makes the fourth choice (It has a preface written by William Shakespeare) incorrect.
The correct one is b. innocent child