a type of language that consists of words and phrases that are regarded as very informal, are more common in speech than writing, and are typically restricted to a particular context or group of people.
Answer:
Did you now that National Rabbit Week is in July? Rabbit Week is a celebration of rabbits as family pets.
Explanation:
The first two have an apostrophe in pets, which doesn't fit this type of sentence. The last option doesn't make sense as that wouldn't be a reason for the holiday to be in July.
I don't really know why this would be a question related to school but either way I need to be taking this class.
Nowadays, the word <em>swag </em>is sort of synonymous with the word <em>cool</em>. People didn't really start using it in that way until around 2003, and when it became a definitive Thing in 2010.
Prior to this, however, the word <em>swag</em> was just used as a way to describe how someone walks. No, literally; the earliest recordings of the word came from William Shakespeare in <em>a Midsummer Night's Dream</em>. The official definition around the late sixteenth century was "to strut in a defiant or insolent manner," or sometimes as ways to describe how inept that a person was.
Strangely, its meaning got somehow lost a little while back, with a lot of people wondering where exactly this word came from since, surely, the creator of it wasn't Jay-Z or Will.i.am, right?
Dig more into it if you actually want to know. Simply, it was just how a person presented themselves; not that different to how it's used now.
Answer:
Home, sweet, sweet home is a one hundred and twenty three paged fiction novel that is based on homecoming of immigrants who where abandoned by their country in a foreign nation but were eager to go back to their nation.
This book was written by Femi Ojo - Ade and published on 1st of January, 1987 in Nigeria by University Press.
An extract quoted directly from the book reads "I am your lost child, the one that ran away, the one you sent away, the one you didn't want; that you refused parenthood, the one you hated; that you abhorred."
A notable character in the novel is Ade.