Edebiyat Ödev Yardımı
Edebiyat, fikirleri, duyguları ve deneyimleri dil aracılığıyla ifade eden ve ileten bir sanat formudur. Çok çeşitli biçim ve tarzları kapsayan, insan kültürünün ayrılmaz bir parçasıdır. Edebi eserler roman, şiir, drama, deneme ve daha fazlasını içerebilir. Edebiyat yalnızca toplumsal, tarihi ve kültürel arka planı yansıtmaz, aynı zamanda okuyucunun hayal gücüne, duygularına ve eleştirel düşünme yeteneklerine de ilham verir. Edebiyat sayesinde insan, insanlığın iç dünyasını keşfedebilir, farklı bakış açılarını ve değerleri anlayabilir, güzelliğin keyfini yaşayabilir. Edebiyatın kişisel gelişim ve toplumsal gelişim üzerinde önemli bir etkisi vardır.
- Directions: Read the following text carefully. A Birthday Song 1. One morning, John Evans shuffled into my life . A raged- looking boy, he was decked out in oversized , hand-me-down clothes and worn-out shoes that split apart at the seams. 2. John was the son of black migrant workers who had recently arrived in our small North Carolina town for a season of apple picking. These laborers were the poorest of the poor, earning barely enough to feed their families. 3. Standing at the head of our second-grade class that morning, John Evans was a miserable sight. He shifted from foot to foot as our teacher.Mrs. Parmele, penned his name in the attendance book. We weren't sure what to make of the shoddy newcomer, but whispers of disapproval began drifting from row to row. 4. "What is that?" the boy behind me mumbled . "Somebody open a window," a girl said, giggling. Mrs . Parmele looked up at us from behind her reading glasses . The murmuring stopped, and she went back to her paper work. 5. "Class, this is John Evans," Mrs. Parmele announced, trying to sound enthusiastic. John looked around and smiled hoping somebody would smile back Nobody did. He kept on grinning anyway. 6. I held my breath, hopping Mrs. Parmele wouldn't notice the empty desk next to mine. She did, and pointed him in that direction. He loked over at me and slid into the seat, but I averted my eyes so he wouldn't think that I could be a possible new friend. 7. By the end of his first week, John had found firm footing at the bottom of our school's social ladder. "It's his own fault," I told my mother one evening at dinner. "He barely even knows how to count." 8. My mother had grown to known John quite well through my nightly commentary. She always listened patiently but rarely said anything more than a thoughtful "hmmm" or "I see." 9. "Can I sit by you?"John stood in front of me, lunch tray in his hands, and a grin on his face , I looked around to see who was watching. "Okay," I replied feebly. 10. As I watched him eat and listened to him ramble on, it occurred to me that maybe some of the ridiculed heaped on John was unreasonable. He was actually pleasant to be around and was by far the most cheerful boy I knew. 11. After lunch, we joined forces to conquer the playground, moving from monkey bars to swing set to sandbox. As we lined up behind Mrs . Parmele for the march back to class, I made up my mind that John will remain friendless no longer. 12. "Why do you think the kids treat John so badly?" I asked one night as Mother tucked me into bed. 13. "I don't know," she said sadly."Maybe that's all they know." 14. "Mother, tomorrow is his birthday, and he's not going to get 15. Mother and I both knew that whenever a kid had a birthday, his mother would bring cuncakes and narty favors for the entire class. Between my birthday and my sister's my mom.
- The domestic sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) descends from a wild plant native to South America. It also populates the Polynesian Islands, where evidence confirms that Native Hawaiians and other Indigenous peoples were cultivating the plant centuries before seafaring first occurred over the thousands of miles of ocean separating them from South America. To explain how the sweet potato was first introduced in Polynesia botanist Pablo Muñoz-Rodriguez and colleagues analyzed the DNA of numerous varieties of the plant, concluding that Polynesian varieties diverged from South American ones over 100,000 years ago. Given that Polynesia was peopled only in the last three thousand years, the team concluded that __ Mark for Review Which choice most logically completes the text? A the cultivation of the sweet potato in Polynesia likely predates its cultivation in South America. B Polynesian peoples likely acquired the sweet potato from South American peoples only within the last three thousand years. C human activity likely played no role in the introduction of the sweet potato in Polynesia. D Polynesian sweet potato varieties likely descend from a single South American variety that was domesticated not wild.
- Ratified by more than 90 countries, the Nagoya Protocol is an international agreement ensuring that Indigenous communities are compensated when their agricultural resources and knowledge of wild plants and animals are utilized by agricultural corporations. However, the protocol has shortcomings. For example, it allows corporations to insist that their agreements with communities to conduct research on the commercial uses of the communities' resources and knowledge.remain confidential. Therefore, some Indigenous advocates express concern that the protocol may have the unintended effect of __ Mark for Review Which choice most logically completes the text? A diminishing the monetary reward that corporations might derive from their agreements with Indigenous communities. B limiting the research that corporations conduct on the resources of the Indigenous communities with which they have signed agreements. C preventing independent observers from determining whether the agreements. guarantee equitable compensation for Indigenous communities. D discouraging Indigenous communities from learning new methods for harvesting plants and animals from their corporate partners.
- Ancestral Puebloans, the civilization from which present-day Pueblo tribes descended, emerged as early as 1500 B.C.E. in an area of what is now the southwestern United States and dispersed suddenly in the late 1200sC.E. , abandoning established villages with systems for farming crops and turkeys. Recent analysis comparing turkey remains at Mesa Verde, one such village in southern Colorado, to samples from modern turkey populations in the Rio Grande Valley of north central New Mexico determined that the latter birds descended in part from turkeys cultivated at Mesa Verde with shared genetic markers appearing only after 1280. Thus, researchers concluded that __ 13 Mark for Review Which choice most logically completes the text? A conditions of the terrains in the Rio Grande Valley and Mesa Verde had greater similarities in the past than they do today. B some Ancestral Puebloans migrated to the Rio Grande Valley in the late 1200s and carried farming practices with them. C Indigenous peoples living in the Rio Grande Valley primarily planted crops and did not cultivate turkeys before 1280. D the Ancestral Puebloans of Mesa Verde likely adopted the farming practices of Indigenous peoples living in other regions.
- "The Young Girl" is a 1920 short story by Katherine Mansfield. In the story, the narrator takes an unnamed seventeen-year-old girl and her younger brother out for a meal. In describing the teenager, Mansfield frequently contrasts the characters pleasant appearance with her unpleasant attitude, as when Mansfield writes of the teenager, __ Mark for Review Which quotation from "The Young Girl" most effectively illustrates the claim? A "I heard her murmur.1 can't bear flowers on a table." They had evidently been giving her intense pain for she positively closed her eyes as I moved them away." B "While we waited she took out a little gold powder-box with a mirror in the lid. shook the poor little puff as though she loathed it, and dabbed her lovely nose. C "I saw, after that,she couldn't stand this place a moment longer,and, indeed, she jumped up and turned away while I went through the vulgar act of paying for the tea." D "She didn't even take her gloves off. She lowered her eyes and drummed on the table. When a faint violin sounded she winced and bit her lip again. Silence."