<p>Main Entry: ap·pre·hen·sion
Pronunciation: ˌa-pri-ˈhen(t)-shən
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Late Latin apprehension-, apprehensio, from Latin apprehendere
Date: 14th century
1 a : the act or power of perceiving or comprehending</p>
<p>The Virgil passage does not appear to be on Google.</p>
<p>virgil seditious chicago motel shoe turnpike concrete pontiac cowboy cards “patriotic offense”</p>
<p>returns no results.</p>
<p>the one about funny workers</p>
<p>passage 2 would respond to passage 1 by</p>
<p>was it saying that the funny workers help create a better working environment</p>
<p>Main Entry: ap·pre·hen·sion
Pronunciation: ˌa-pri-ˈhen(t)-shən
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Late Latin apprehension-, apprehensio, from Latin apprehendere
Date: 14th century
1 a : the act or power of perceiving or comprehending</p>
<p>also it was unaccustomed freedom because he also wasn’t used to being able to listen to Elvis on the radio. stealthy progress makes no sense because how do you come up with what they were doing as stealthy?</p>
<p>^can anyone tell me details about the skepticism question? I don’t remember T-T
Thank you : )</p>
<p>I think it was about whether humor is useful in the workplace?
Both authors sounded skeptical about it.</p>
<p>somebody plz post links to the passages the ARE on the internet. also guys theres no way that it’s “wistful”. the main point of the part of the passage from that question was that for the first time he thought of his dad as a friend. the whole passage was about companionship. i know that they mentioned his mother, but wistful means that the entire part of that passage was sad, and doesnt at all cover the recognition of their newfound companionship</p>
<p>the one about funny workers</p>
<p>passage 2 would respond to passage 1 by</p>
<p>was it saying that the funny workers help create a better working environment?</p>
<p>What was the question where the answer was “tender”?</p>
<p>^ The expression on his dad’s face was tender (soft).</p>
<p>Bill: The question referred specifically to the lines about thinking about his dead mother. It wasn’t despair because he was envisioning his mother in the stars, and it most certainly wasn’t light-heartedness.</p>
<p>What was the question about the drummer (and the answers besides progenitor/exploit)?</p>
<p>So you’re saying “Wistful” is wrong because then it would imply that the whole paragraph was sad?
Does anyone remember the exact wording of the question?</p>
<p>Thank you.
But , did Author 2 support the humor in workplace?<br>
0 。0?</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>As I said before, it wasn’t their mood I thought the passage was referring to; it was more like their progress on the road. There’s got to be a specific reason for why the author chose to have “escaped thieves” rather than freed birds or other freed people/things, for example… </p>
<p>And Randwulf, I couldn’t find anything on Google either. Going to look in the Library of Congress’s online database…</p>
<p>No, Author 2 did not support humor in the workplace. Neither of them did.</p>
<p>i just think theres nothing that supports stealthy. and was the qustion about some guy who was usually blank was uncharacteristically blank while discussing the movie on the experimental?</p>
<p>the father son passage was so hard >F</p>
<p>what was the question where answer was incomplete</p>
<p>Something about the father’s reasoning being incomplete because he said that he wanted to take the back roads to see the scenery or something but the son said that he also believed that they went that way because there were no fees and food was cheaper.</p>
<p>can someone explain why its not plain/ornate but rather austere/unadorned?</p>
<p>Because the second part of the sentence was something like
the statues with the paint were not ________
and that implies that they weren’t the first blank, plain, so they would have to be synonyms.
plain and ornate are opposites and austere/unadorned are synonyms.</p>
<p>because it said that ppl generally thot greek art was plain, but the new found antiques
were not as PLAIN</p>