Carol HAS a piano lesson tomorrow. ( cause have does not make sense)
hope this helps! :)
American Psychological Association format for referencing the work of a book author is as follows:
- Calvin D. (2018). <em>Samuel Clemens: An American Icon. </em>Woodworth Press.
Modern Language Association format for referencing the work of a book author is:
- Calvin, Dean. <em>Samuel Clemens: An American Icon. </em>Woodworth Press, 2018.
Depending on the format you are using for your work, the referencing style in the works-cited list entry can take any of the above forms.
In the American Psychological Association format the style is
Last name and first name initial. (Date of publication). <em>The title of the work in italics.</em> Publisher.
Using the Modern Language Association format the style goes thus:
Last Name, First Name. <em>Title of Book in italics.</em> City of Publication, Publisher, Publication Date.
Learn more here:
brainly.com/question/18007772
This comes from the novel “<em><u>Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy</u></em>” written by <u>Gary Schmidt </u>and is about how Turner, the son of a reverend, had to move with his family to Phippsburg, where he met Lizzie, a black girl who lived on an island where former slaves live. He was not happy living there at first but with Lizzie he had a good time.
Question: What aspect of Phippsburg contributes to Turner’s internal conflict at this point in the story?
Answer: A. The town is very small, and everybody can observe and comment on what Turner is doing.
It was used as an excuse to create problems
You forgot to mention that this question is about the article "The Flight from Conversation".
Answer:
With the use of oxymoron, Turkle meant that we live constantly alone, but always in "contact" with the people we care about through technology. This statement influences the entire article showing how this ability is affecting our personal relationships.
Explanation:
The article shows how technology has enabled an atificial and shallow form of community. This is because technology allows us to talk to anyone, anywhere in the world, however, this communication does not form bonds and we are always alone.
However, we are alone in a collective way, since all people use this same type of communication. This results in the creation of large groups, which in fact do not exist, are not substantial. As the author of the article says, technology makes us come "a tribe of one."