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English 7 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Help with 3.10 English 3 on FLVS? Will medal and fan! I just need help i dont understand!

TheSmartOne (thesmartone):

I have the test answers, but they come at a price >:)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Hehe what is this price...

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@TheSmartOne

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I just need help really....

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@TheSmartOne

OpenStudy (hannaha):

What's your questions?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

From The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain As he was passing by the house where Jeff Thatcher lived, he saw a new girl in the garden—a lovely little blue-eyed creature with yellow hair plaited into two long-tails, white summer frock and embroidered pan-talettes. The fresh-crowned hero fell without firing a shot. A certain Amy Lawrence vanished out of his heart and left not even a memory of herself behind. He had thought he loved her to distraction; he had regarded his passion as adoration; and behold it was only a poor little evanescent partiality. He had been months winning her; she had confessed hardly a week ago; he had been the happiest and the proudest boy in the world only seven short days, and here in one instant of time she had gone out of his heart like a casual stranger whose visit is done. Identify three words that best describe Tom Sawyer as he is depicted in this excerpt. Choose one answer from each group. Type the LETTER ONLY for each answer in the correct blank. Type A, B, or C for Blank 1. Preoccupied Concerned Impulsive Type F, G, or H for Blank 2. Horrified Confused Determined Type I, J, or K for Blank 3. Passionate Considerate Indecisive Answer for Blank 1: Answer for Blank 2: Answer for Blank 3: Question 2 (Fill-In-The-Blank Worth 6 points) (LC) From "The Tyranny of Things" by Elizabeth Morris Once upon a time, when I was very tired, I chanced to go away to a little house by the sea. "It is empty," they said, "but you can easily furnish it." Empty! Yes, thank Heaven! Furnish it? Heaven forbid! Its floors were bare, its walls were bare, its tables there were only two in the house were bare. There was nothing in the closets but books; nothing in the bureau drawers but the smell of clean, fresh wood; nothing in the kitchen but an oil stove, and a few a very few dishes; nothing in the attic but rafters and sunshine, and a view of the sea. After I had been there an hour there descended upon me a great peace, a sense of freedom, of in finite leisure. In the twilight I sat before the flickering embers of the open fire, and looked out through the open door to the sea, and asked myself, "Why?" Then the answer came: I was emancipated from things. There was nothing in the house to demand care, to claim attention, to cumber my consciousness with its insistent, unchanging companionship. There was nothing but a shelter, and outside, the fields and marshes, the shore and the sea. These did not have to be taken down and put up and arranged and dusted and cared for. They were not things at all, they were powers, presences. And so I rested. While the spell was still unbroken, I came away. For broken it would have been, I know, had I not fled first. Even in this refuge the enemy would have pursued me, found me out, encompassed me. If we could but free ourselves once for all, how simple life might become! One of my friends, who, with six young children and only one servant, keeps a spotless house and a soul serene, told me once how she did it. "My dear, once a month I give away every single thing in the house that we do not imperatively need. It sounds wasteful, but I don’t believe it really is. Sometimes Jeremiah mourns over missing old clothes, or back numbers of the magazines, but I tell him if he doesn’t want to be mated to a gibbering maniac he will let me do as I like." The old monks knew all this very well. One wonders sometimes how they got their power; but go up to Fiesole, and sit a while in one of those little, bare, white-walled cells, and you will begin to understand. If there were any spiritual force in one, it would have to come out there. I have not their courage, and I win no such freedom. I allow myself to be overwhelmed by the invading host of things, making fitful resistance, but without any real steadiness of purpose. Yet never do I wholly give up the struggle, and in my heart I cherish an ideal, remotely typified by that empty little house beside the sea. Which words from the excerpt does Morris use to refer to things? Choose one answer from each group. Type the LETTER ONLY for each answer in the correct blank. Type B, C, or D for Blank 1. Leisure Powers Insistent Type E, F, or G for Blank 2. Demand Refuge Magazines Type H, I, or J for Blank 3. Ourselves Single Enemy @HannahA

OpenStudy (hannaha):

For the first question: 1: preoccupied 2: confused 3: indecisive

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Why?

TheSmartOne (thesmartone):

The price is that you get off of OpenStudy and take your test by yourself like you're supposed to.

OpenStudy (hannaha):

@domisreallytall what do you mean? if you read the narrative that's the conclusion you get from it

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