I believe this is the answer I agree with Drew<span />
The sentence that is correctly hyphenated is "The beauty of Mount Fuji's near-perfect cone shape has enchanted people for centuries."
Near-perfect is correctly hyphenated because in this context it is a compound modifier, it modifies Mount Fuji's appearance.
It is used to lower people's rights of speech. They would not allow them to have free speech.
Answer:
an expression designed to call something to mind without mentioning it explicitly; an indirect or passing reference.
Answer:
Because there was a single pouch of energy drink sitting on a shelf in the back, it was almost empty.
Explanation:
The correct answer is option C because it combines the clauses effectively by using parallelism to balance the clauses in the sentence.
Here, the reason is first given, before the state of the shelf is stated.