Answer: A
The most relevant piece of evidence for this claim is option A. Option A is the only one that specifically describes how our lives have improved due to the exploration of outer space. Option B tells us about changes, but does not state that the changes have been positive. Option C describes exploration, but does not describe how we have benefitted from it. Finally, option D discusses the benefits we might someday experience, but not the ones we already enjoy in the present.
"I Am Prepared to Die" is the name given to the three-hour speech given by Nelson Mandela on 20 April 1964 from the dock of the defendant at the Rivonia Trial. The speech is so titled because it ends with the words "it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die".
<span>In those quotations from the story, author is using both direct and indirect
characterization. Direct characterization is when author directly states what characters are like and indirect characterization shows personality of a character
through speech, looks, actions, thought and effects on others. In the first quotation
author is using direct characterization through stating how character looks and states her actions –
Della is slender and she has mastered the arts. In second quotation author also uses direct characterization through looks and actions – Madam is large, too
white, chilly and she hardly looks at ‘Sofronie. In the third quotation, Madam’s
characterization is indirectly shown through her action and speech – she bidded
twenty dollars by lifting her hand. An in the fourth quotation indirect
characterization is shown through actions – he looked the watch on the sly.</span>
<span> The controlling idea of Chapter 5 of </span>The Dark Game<span> is that the Berlin tunnel was an ambitious and valuable project carried out by the US and Britain to gather intelligence about the Soviets.</span>
Answer: D.- He feels they represent awe-inspiring
Explanation: Ralph Waldo Emerson or "the champion of individualism" was an American essayist,, lecturer, philosopher and poet who was the leader of trascendentalism of the mid- 19th century. In Chapter I of Nature he expresses his admiration for existence.