The answer to this question is The first on the page the very top one
Answer: Relative clause is<u> "that are not registered."</u> It <u>is essential</u> to the meaning of the sentence and, therefore, <u>does not require commas</u>.
Explanation:
A clause that starts with a relative pronoun (who, that, which, whose, where, when) is called a relative clause. The purpose of these clauses is to provide more information about the noun that precedes them. In this case, relative clause "that are not registered" is used to describe the noun "cars." It is essential to the meaning of the sentence, since it tells us which cars in particular will be towed to the nearest impound lot. If a clause provides important information, it is considered essential and does not require commas.
It's A as to the avoiding double negation which is not possible in English.
The theme is the central message in a literary work!
Hope that helped, even though it was slightly late :D
If Wendy is writing the first draft of her research paper about symbolism used in George Orwell's Animal Farm, then Wendy should take short breaks while writing the draft. Since it is her first draft, there will be instances that she can't immediately follow on the thought that she has written or will be stuck on particular parts of the draft. Sometimes, revisions are to be made just to make way for an idea or thought that she had recently thought of or has forgotten to write about it. Either way, taking a break makes Wendy feel more relax and thinking isn't hard enough. This makes the oxygen that we take in have their time to be delivered to the brain which allows us to think more clearly. That is why breathing techniques and breaks are very important.