B. Exploring the Imagination and emotions of the individual.
Below are the answers:
<span>Both are beautiful in their own way.
</span><span>Both struggle in their environment.
</span><span> Both are rare and unusual.
Doodle and the Scarlet Ibis are comparable in that both are uncommon and delicate creatures. Wonderful in their own specific manner, yet strangely unique and uncommon. The Ibis is red and at last, Doodle is left in a contorted stance like the Ibis and he, as well, is red with blood.
The winged creature is indigenous to the tropics and does not have a place where he is, and Doodle can't satisfy his sibling's gauges of what a sibling ought to be. The demise of Doodle and the ibis have a few likenesses. They both pass on due in part to a tempest. They both are red after death.</span>
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "The prepositional phrase “to toss” acts as an adverbial phrase." <span>In a feeding frenzy, the pigeons descended upon the breadcrumbs that the kindly old man on the park bench continued to toss.</span>
Answer:
If Passage 1 is adapted from "Ancient DNA Tells Story of Giant Eagle
Evolution," © 2005 by Public Library of Science, then the answer would be as follows:
It can reasonably be inferred from Passage 1 that, for most bird species, there is a certain size at which they
a. are unable to fly.
Explanation:
According to Passage 1, "When the dodo's ancestor (thought to be a migratory pigeon) settled on this island with abundant food, no competition from terrestrial mammals, and no predators, it could survive without flying, and thus was freed from the energetic and size constraints of flight.
"
"Size constraints of flight" means that the birds that are big to a certain size cannot/could not fly. Taking examples of some birds once roaming New Zealand into consideration, they were giant birds with large wingspans, and therefore, they were unable to fly (flightless).
Other options, namely b. require less energy when flying; c. are more likely to attack other animals; and d. do have a to compete with other birds for food, are nowhere found in Passage 1. In other words, No related information is available.
Therefore, the most possible answer is a.
<span>He brought them to the men. The two groups of humans fit well together, and Raven became very protective of his people. Based on the passage, the Haida had values that</span>