The last excerpt is the answer, it explains how hes ready for a hunt but then sees a man
Answer:
In the story, "The Valiant Woman" by J.J. Powers, we find that in judging people, we overlook most of the characteristics that draw us to them, but we do so without realizing it. We can draw inaccurate conclusions about a person by misjudging their facial expressions, their physical stamina, and their obvious personality traits. When people are blinded by false superiority, they judge a person incorrectly because they fail to see them as they really are.
Explanation:
The paragraph has been revised and the inconsistencies with the shift of person and shift of number have been corrected.
It has been rewritten and consistency was maintained by making use of the first person plural when referring to readers, and the third person plural nouns and pronouns when referring to those being judged.
The answer is:
“Tony cooked dinner, and I made the salad, but Mike just ate.”
As stated by William Strunk, independent clauses must not be separated by a comma. However, he suggests placing a comma before a conjunction when introducing an independent clause. Therefore, the first two clauses are joined by a comma and the conjunction <em>and,</em> while the last clause is separated by a comma before the conjunction <em>but.</em>
L - think about what the central ideas of the article are
ll- paraphrase the central ideas of the article
lll - write the central ideas of the article in her own words
lllll- condense the central ideas into a shorter form
Quindlen links the conclusion to the introduction of her essay with the words "like many improbable ideas, when it works, it's a wonder", which is very close to her claim in the overall text, "America is an Improbable idea", it isn't supposed to work but it does despite all of the differences, specifically racial or ethnic, within it.