adeline12401
18.08.2021 •
English
Based on the passage, what will Miranda’s mother probably do?
Solved
Show answers
More tips
- F Food and Cooking How to Choose the Right Olive Oil: A Comprehensive Guide...
- P Philosophy Is Everything We Strive for Eventually Achieved and Destroyed?...
- S Society and Politics Understanding Politics and Its Role in the Development of Civilization...
- P Philosophy Why Did God Create Man and Place Him in Obscurity?...
- S Society and Politics Skoptsy: Who They Are and How They Perform Castration?...
- O Other Childhood Fears: What Many of Us Experienced...
- P Philosophy What is Something for you?...
- H Health and Medicine Why Do Humans Have One Heart?...
- P Philosophy Unbelievable stories of encounters with otherworldly forces...
- O Other How to Accidentally Get a Rare Coin with Your Change and How to Know Its Value?...
Answers on questions: English
- E English How do you come outto your grandma as lesbian...
- P Physics The atomic number of an element is determined by the number of a. electrons. b. protons. c. protons and neutrons. d. neutrons....
- P Physics Describe how to charge an electroscope positively using a positive rod.name the other apparatus needed ...
- M Mathematics What is the inquality...
- M Mathematics What number between 20 and 25 is a prime number?...
Ответ:
Taken from President John Kennedy's Rice Stadium Moon Speech (1962), the phrase that the President Kennedy repeated is “the first waves of” (“Those who came before us made certain that this country rode the first waves of the industrial revolutions, the first waves of modern invention, and the first wave of nuclear power, and this generation does not intend to founder in the backwash of the coming age of space.”). Kennedy repeated this phrase in his speech because he wanted to highlight the importance of leading the “coming age of space” as previous generations have done with previous important events, previous “first waves” (of industrial revolutions/of modern invention/of nuclear power). Then, he mentions that his generation would not fall behind. Kennedy also wanted to emphasize the unity as a nation, which shares a mission, by using the personal pronoun “we” in the following sentences (“We mean to be a part of it--we mean to lead it.”).