Answer:
D.
Explanation:
Microsleeps occur when one has not had enough sleep. One is unaware they're having microsleeps, but they happen.
Answer:
Lines 21-25 makes all the difference when you look at the theme of the poem which speaks to Children Growing up and eventually leaving home.
Explanation:
The learning how to ride a bicycle is a metaphor for life.
Every other line seems to be talking about her eight-year-old daughter learning how to ride a bicycle. See lines 1-6.
Her surprise is ignited when her daughter starts "pumping away" at the pedals screaming with life. She is surprised to know that the mother-daughter experience as she knows it is over already. See lines 7-10.
But when you read those lines "like a handkerchief waving goodbye" all of a sudden the entire picture, the intended message hits you and you are almost moved to tears when you see from a mothers perspective how ti feels to quickly a daughter grow up and leave home.
Cheers!
Carol HAS a piano lesson tomorrow. ( cause have does not make sense)
hope this helps! :)
Answer:
Platypus has venom producing glands, which are rare among mammals, but it's venom is not generally and lethal to humans.
Explanation:
I have corrected the FOUR errors.
The platypus has venom-producing glands, which are rare among mammals, but its venom is not generally lethal to humans.
The Haida and Maori cultures view the mother-child relationship as:
Both view mothers as caring and protective over their children.
The Haida myth focuses on creating light and people. The Haida creation myth is about a trickster who stole the sun, the moon and the stars in order to bring light to his own world. Even though he created animals, fish, trees, men, and all the creatures, they lived in darkness because he stole light.
On the other hand, the Maori myth focuses mostly on the relationship between parts of nature. The Maori creation myth tells the story how humans were born and how nature helped in their birth by sacrificing themselves.
Hope it helps.