The correct answer is A. <span>“This book should motivate every person who cares about freedom to become more involved in government.”
With this statement, the author's intention is obviously to persuade us to read the book. It doesn't communicate what was the author's goal (such as statements B and C). It is more persuasive than the statement D because it includes the "who cares about freedom" part, as an appeal to ethos (morals). It's been trying to say that if you don't read this book, it means you don't care about freedom.
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Assuming your question is 'how to CONJUGATE the verb put,' these are the correct answers. There are 12 tenses in the English language, and I will write the form of the verb put in each of them:
1. present simple: put/puts
2. present progressive: is/are putting
3. present perfect: have/has put
4. present perfect progressive: have/has been putting
5. past simple: put
6. past progressive: was/were putting
7. past perfect: had put
8. past perfect progressive: had been putting
9. future simple: will put
10. future progressive: will be putting
11. future perfect: will have put
12. future perfect progressive: will have been putting
If you are wondering whether this verb is regular or irregular, it is irregular: put - put - put (you don't add -ed).
Answer:
Can you finish your sentence? I am very curious about what the back story is;;
Answer:
he is disappointed with his native land
Explanation: