D. <u>T</u>he <u>B</u>attle of <u>O</u>kinawa, the last and largest battle of the <u>P</u>acific <u>W</u>ar, was one of the costliest battles of <u>W</u>orld <u>W</u>ar II for both <u>A</u>mericans and <u>J</u>apanese.
Since it is necessary to emphasize the word and from the choices I would go with the one(s) with the quotation marks. B and C are the same, so it is both
Answer:
acknowledge the potentially embarrassing circumstances under which she is delivering her speech
Explanation:
<span>The answer is B. This is because "either' and "nor" cannot be used together. Instead, "either/or," is a pair, or "neither/nor," which is the negated version of "either/or." To make this sentence correct, you would say "Neither the broken lamp nor the stained rug was thrown out with the trash," OR "Either the broken lamp or the stained rug was thrown out with the trash."</span>
Well chronological order is like A-Z with events but since this is English I would pick casual transitions.