I think it would be classified as realistic, or scientific nonfiction.
Answer:
"Build up . . . institutions which will ensure justice”
“end poverty and ignorance and disease”
Explanation:
edge
<span>B) because it is a newspaper article
Quotation marks go around the title of a short work. Long works are underlined. For example, poems, short stories, and songs are all in quotation marks. Books and album titles are underlined. This source is an article. We can tell because the magazine is called the Hampton Gazette. There is also an edition number in the source citation - E8. These clues tell us it is an article. </span>
Answer:
None of these.
Explanation:
A complete predicate is the part of a sentence that contains the verb and everything that is not the subject. This means that the phrase that starts from the verb to the very end, including the modifying phrases that complete the sentence, is the complete predicate.
A complete predicate is different from a predicate in that a predicate just includes the verb and the statement about the subject while a complete predicate will include everything from the verb to the modifying clause or phrase that follows it.
In the given sentence, the subject is "Lindsay" while the verb is "enjoys". So, the complete predicate will be "enjoys surfing but isn't very good", which is not given in the options.
So, the correct answer is "none of these".
Answer:
The writing style goes from 3rd person to 1st person
Explanation:
When the narrator referred to 'no man' it is in third person POV, then he refers to 'my work' which is in first person POV.