subject
English, 17.11.2019 11:31 antojustice

Read the excerpt from the odyssey.

this was an army, trained to fight on horseback
or, where the ground required, on foot. they came
with dawn over that terrain like the leaves
and blades of spring. so doom appeared to us,
dark word of zeus for us, our evil days.
my men stood up and made a fight of it—
backed on the ships, with lances kept in play,
from bright morning through the blaze of noon
so holding our beach, although so far outnumbered;
but when the sun passed toward unyoking time,
then the achaeans, one by one, gave way.

which stage of the hero’s journey is represented in this passage?

the return home
the road of trials
the transformation
the call to adventure

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on English

question
English, 22.06.2019 01:10
This lesson explored netiquette as well as the negative implications of internet use, such as privacy invasions and cyberbullying. what are three online practices that you will change after this lesson? first, list the three things that you'd change. then, describe the new behaviors and explain your reason for adopting them.
Answers: 3
question
English, 22.06.2019 08:30
Read the excerpt from "mother tongue." those tests were constructed around items like fill-in-the-blank sentence completion, such as “even though tom was mary thought he was ” and the correct answer always seemed to be the most bland combinations of thoughts, for example, “even though tom was foolish, mary thought he was ridiculous.” well, according to my mother, there were very few limitations as to what tom could have been and what mary might have thought of him. so i never did well on tests like that. how does tan build a central idea of her story in the excerpt? tan discusses the types of questions on achievement tests to support the idea that the tests limit students’ ability to write well. tan explains a question on a language achievement test to support the idea that the tests should include more interesting content. tan gives an example of her experience with achievement tests to support the idea that they are not always accurate measures of language ability. tan considers how her mother might answer a question on a test to support the idea that nonstandard english limits a person’s ability to communicate.
Answers: 2
question
English, 22.06.2019 08:30
Read the excerpt from "mother tongue." lately, i’ve been giving more thought to the kind of english my mother speaks. like others, i have described it to people as “broken” or “fractured” english. but i wince when i say that. it has always bothered me that i can think of no other way to describe it other than “broken,” as if it were damaged and needed to be fixed, as if it lacked a certain wholeness and soundness. what best supports the inference that tan believes nonstandard english is no less valid than standard english? tan spends a lot of time thinking about her mother’s “fractured” english. tan has trouble thinking of descriptive words when she is writing. tan’s american education makes it difficult for her to understand her mother. tan winces when she describes her mother’s english as “broken.”
Answers: 2
question
English, 22.06.2019 09:20
Which excerpt is an example of a claim of policy from compulsory voting an idea whose time has come
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Read the excerpt from the odyssey.

this was an army, trained to fight on horseback
Questions
question
Social Studies, 19.07.2019 12:00
question
Mathematics, 19.07.2019 12:00
question
Mathematics, 19.07.2019 12:00
question
Mathematics, 19.07.2019 12:00