Decode the secret note.
Hint: Ciphers are designed to scramble up the words.
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Answers: 2
English, 21.06.2019 16:00, clapoint2003p3chnu
True or false: a writer uses ellipses to indicate an omission or that something has been left out of a direct quote.
Answers: 3
English, 21.06.2019 21:50, sana20
Time remaining 59: 46 which central idea should be included in a paraphrase of this excerpt? read the excerpt from the odyssey. out to sea again! ' my men were mutinous, fools, on stores of wine. sheep after sheep they butchered by the surf, and shambling cattle, feasting.-while fugitives went inland, running to call to arms the main force of cicones 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. the forces sent by cicones to fight odysseus and his men arrived during the early morning hours. odysseus and his men feasted on the animals they slaughtered while on the island of cicones the forces sent by cicones to stop the plundering of odysseus and his men were skilled and powerful odysseus views the forces sent by cicones as punishment from the greek god zeus. mark this and retum save and exit save and exit next sub subunit
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 00:00, booooooooooo37
The following question is based on your reading of a midsummer night’s dream by william shakespeare. why does puck transform bottom? a. to disrupt the play. c. to scare the mechanicals. b. for revenge on theseus. d. to scare the lovers.
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 02:00, fuenzalida73
3. how could the following sentence be rewritten as an exclamatory sentence? how dangerous was the saber-toothed tiger? a. tell someone how dangerous the saber-toothed tiger was. b. the saber-toothed tiger was dangerous. c. the saber-toothed tiger was dangerous! d. no change is necessary. c. the saber-toothed tiger was dangerous!
Answers: 3
Mathematics, 07.05.2021 01:30
Mathematics, 07.05.2021 01:30
Mathematics, 07.05.2021 01:30