Answer: D. The Battle of Gettysburg was a three-day conflict in which Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia faced off against George Meade's Army of the Potomac. Instead of fighting defensively, which had won Lee many victories, the Confederates made a disastrous charge against the Union center.
Explanation:
The best option is D as it corrects errors in spelling and grammar.
It corrected the ''one Lee...'' to ''won Lee...''.
It corrected the use of a lower case for Meade to an uppercase which is correct as Meade is the name of a person and so as a proper noun should always have its first letter capitalized.
It corrected the use of an upper case for ''Disastrous charge...'' to the lower case ''disastrous charge...'' which is correct because disastrous is not a noun in this instance.
Answer:
A. It shows that Cassius thinks that Brutus is too optimistic.
Explanation:
Shakespeare's use of triumph instead of victory in the excerpt in the passage affects its meaning because it shows that Cassius thinks Brutus is too optimistic, that is, Brutus expect they would win the war.
Cassius is trying to ask Brutus if he could face the humiliation of losing the battle and be led through the street of Time as trophy.
This means that there are two consequences of fighting a war, either to lose or to win.
Loosing means to be paraded as trophy and winning means to parade the losers as trophy.
Girl same thing here. Online school isn’t the move.