It would be in passive voice. For active voice, it would be something along the lines of, "The FBI opened the email."
Answer: The nurse leaves her work at the hospital and she is nervous when she has to enter the freeway. She is low on gas and it is late at night. The nurse is pulled over to get gas and Gabriel, the gas station worker, insists she goes inside the store to see his present from his sister for his birthday
plz mark brainliest if helpful
Answer:
If an authority figure ordered you to deliver a 400-volt electrical shock to another person, would you follow orders? Most people would answer with an adamant "no." However, the Milgram obedience experiment aimed to prove otherwise.
During the 1960s, Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram conducted a series of obedience experiments that led to some surprising results. These results offer a compelling and disturbing look at the power of authority and obedience.
Answer:
B
Explanation:
A satire is a statement meant to make fun or mock a particular idea. Hyperbole is intention exaggeration. So, satirical hyperbole is the combination of both. In option B, the writer is trying to disagree and make fun of the curfew idea comparing it to a rainy day, which is obviously not possible.
The answer is B because it puts a coma in the correct spot to pause between the first half of the sentence and the second. The others either randomly placed a period, using the wrong word choices, or made it a run on sentence. :)