subject
English, 30.12.2019 07:31 marquetter7689

“we’re here, we’ve arrived, this is our home for the future and we just have to make the best of things.”
foreseeable
desolate
chaos
lacquered
2.
“bruno thought about it and shook his head. ‘i don’t think so,’ he said with great "
conviction
sing-song
muster
overawe
3.
“’bruno’s not nine, he’s only six,’ said one particular monster over and over again in a voice, dancing around him and poking him in the ribs.”
sing-song
chaos
chain gang
courgette
4.
“the walls were hardly visible; instead they were covered with dark shelves, all lined with books, like the ones in the library at the house in berlin.”
muster
customary
mahogany
desolate
5.
“he couldn’t think of anything though. in fact over the last few days he had behaved in a perfectly decent manner to everyone and couldn’t remember causing any at all.”
chaos
overawe
conviction
desolate
6.
“what are you doing? ” he asked in as polite a tone as he could for although he wasn’t happy to come home and find someone going through his possessions, his mother had always told him that he was to treat maria respectfully…”
overawe
muster
desolate
moor
7.
“there was a garden directly beneath bruno’s window…full of flowers which grew in neat orderly sections in soil that looked as if it was tended very carefully by someone who knew that growing flowers in a place like this was something good that they could do, like putting a tiny candle of light in the corner of a huge castle on a misty on a dark winter’s night.”
courgette
banister
moor
chaos
8.
“’and our family is here, bruno. at out-with. this must be our home.’”
foreseeable
ergo
dismissively
customary
9.
“he made his way up the stairs slowly, holding on to the with one hand, and wondered whether the new house in the new place where the new job was would have as fine a to slide down as this one did.”
banister
courgette
mahogany
moor
10.
“’hello, father,’ said bruno quietly, a little by the splendor of the room.”
desolate
overawed
mustered
lacquered
11.
“’oh you’ll make other friends,’ said mother, waving her hand in the air as if the making of a boy’s three best friends for life was an easy thing.”
dismissively
ergo
conviction
customary
12.
“everywhere they looked they could see people…some stood perfectly still in were formed into a sort of and pushing wheelbarrows from one side of the camp to the ”
chain gang
chaos
courgette
sing-song
13.
“bruno turned the door handle and stepped inside and assumed his pose of wide-open eyes, mouth in the shape on an o and arms stretched out by his sides."
desolate
chaos
customary
conviction
14.
“his thick dark hair had obviously been recently and combed, and as bruno watched from above he felt both scared and in awe of him.”
foreseeable
customary
dismissively
lacquered
15.
“there were shops with bright store fronts, and fruit and vegetable stalls with big trays piled high with cabbages, carrots, cauliflowers and corn. some were overspilling with leeks and mushrooms, turnips and sprouts; others with lettuce and green beans, and parsnips.”
chaos
moors
courgettes
chain gangs

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on English

question
English, 20.06.2019 18:04
In night chapter 2 do you think she was insane and hallucinating or having a vision of what was to come
Answers: 1
question
English, 21.06.2019 14:30
John owns stock in ghwb inc. ghwb inc. is planning to issue 200,000 shares of common stock to finance a new factory in china. what type of risk does john face and how can he avoid it? select the best answer from the choices provided. a. john faces inflation risk; he can sell his stock before the new shares are issued. b. john faces inflation risk; he can sell his stock after the new shares are issued. c. john faces share dilution risk; he can sell his stock before the new shares are issued. d. john faces share dilution risk; he can sell his stock after the new shares are issued.
Answers: 2
question
English, 21.06.2019 22:00
Ead this excerpt from the introduction to wheels of change by sue macy. imagine a population imprisoned by their very clothing; the stiff corsets, heavy skirts, and voluminous petticoats that made it difficult to take a deep breath, let alone exercise. add to that the laws and social conventions that cemented a man's place as head of the household and holder of the purse strings. how suffocated women must have felt. and how liberated they must have been as they pedaled their wheels toward new horizons. why does the author include this excerpt?
Answers: 3
question
English, 22.06.2019 00:00
Nature is a recurring theme in early american literature. what view of nature does phillis wheatley provide in "an hymn to the evening"
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
“we’re here, we’ve arrived, this is our home for the future and we just have to make the best of th...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 03.08.2019 07:10
Questions on the website: 13722360