Answer:
The answer is false.
Explanation:
In English, when you join two complete sentences with the conjunctions and, or, but, nor, yet, so, or for, place a comma before the conjunction. If you use just a comma, you create a comma splice and your friends will all laugh at you.
Answer:
Tone: Sorrow and Regret
Explanation:
I would say sorrow and mourning for the first half of it due to the nature of the way there talking makes it seem as if they have lost something they never had. This could also be described as mourning for the loved ones you never new of and make our character mourn over the death of here never before seen mother. Another tone I see near the end hint in is regret using descriptive language to describe how our character could hold our mother, and spend time with her before she died. As well as the regret of not being able to see her in sickness, or at her burial site. This may be the description of a older person describing the time when there mother died that they never knew when they were younger.
For the more positive connotation:
1) A
2) B
Answer:
1884 was the year that Charles C. Converse announced that he had coined thon, a gender-neutral pronoun, by blending that and one. Thon could refer both to men and women, and it would come in handy in cases where gender is unknown, or irrelevant, or where it needs to be concealed.
Explanation: