Answer is A. Romeo in the play has a very young person's idea of love. Where the person they like is their world and they absolutely can't do anything without that person. If they aren't with them, they will never be happy. This is one of the ideas of Romeo and Juliet that love blinds us. They were so infatuated with each other that they killed themselves in the end. B is wrong. He only cared about Juliet. C is wrong. In this part he is not angry. D is wrong. He is not making a decision currently
<span>Gender is not a defining factor in athletic ability. Luma showed that women can be very capable in sports by showing that even barefoot she could make a goal with the soccer ball. This was in spite of what the detractor of women's ability said.</span>
in Joy Harjo's "New Orleans", the line "beaten silver paths" refers to the streets of such city. She remembers of certain Spanish conqueror, De Soto,who came to this lands searching for, and constantly states that he wouldn't find it here. Maybe is a mock to that fact.
The "silver blades and crosses" refers to the sword and crucifix of the conqueror, who drawn in the Mississippi river which dreamt of those items. Maybe this means that the streets of New Orleans were made of the things and dreams of the many conquerors who came to that land in search for gold and failed.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The author's purpose or reason for writing this editorial was to inform and make people conscious about the terrible oil spill in April 2010in the Gulf of México, with the explosion of a British Petroleum rig. This spill caused so much damage to the ecosystem and the environment of the Gulf of México.
The two details from the text that support the answer are the following. The author, Kate Jackson, writes that the BP company knew about the possibility of an accident of this magnitude but it didn't do anything to prevent it. She said that David Rainey, an executive form British Petroleum, had assured the members of the Senate that the facility had no risk of a spill.
The other detail that supports the answer is that she wrote that the oil industry always had been aware of the dangers of spills but never has done so much to prevent them. Also, people like Robert Bea, an offshore engineer, had warned British Petroleum.