ASSIMILATIONS OF THE /j/ Assimilation is when two sounds come together and change or melt into a new sound. Assimilations may happen inside a word, or between two words, when the final sound of a word touches the first sound of the next word (because when we speak we join all the words together).
(Sorry if this didn’t help!
Answer:
<em>The bank teller gave Kurt </em><em>a look </em><em>when he deposited a real check for twenty million dollars.</em>
Explanation:
The indefinite article <em>a/an</em> is used before nouns that are singular and countable, so there is no article before a noun that is plural.
If the word after <em>a/an</em> begins with a consonant, then we use the indefinite article <em>a</em>.
If the word after <em>a/an</em> begins with a vowel, then we use the indefinite article <em>an.</em>
The article relates to the first word of the phrase (if there are more than one, for example, there is an adjective before a noun), so if we had an adjective before the noun <em>look</em> that starts with a vowel (e.g. empty), the correct article would be <em>an</em>.
Answer:
hmm pronounce volume we get to know that in last e is for a snap so as per me it would be short e
Answer:
"Like girls on their hands and knees"
Explanation:
19th line.
Answer:
The military can make people leave any designated military area.
Explanation:
Executive Order 9066 issued by President Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, allowed military and it commanding ranks to designate military areas from which any or all persons may be excluded and it was this order that resulted in the relocation of 112,000 Japanese Americans living on the West Coast into internment camps.