For this question, we are trying to figure out which verb fits the structure of the sentence better.
To do this, we must first find which word the verb is defining. The subject of a sentence (except in a few rare cases) is typically before the verb, and is always a noun.
There are two nouns in the sentence (Someone and rows). Which one is the verb expressing?
Well, let's think about it. Are the rows coughing? Somehow, I doubt it, so we're left with Someone. Someone is a singular pronoun, so the appropriate defining verb would be 'was'.
"Someone a few rows ahead was coughing uncontrollably, so I missed the speaker's closing words."
Hope that helped =)
<span>The Royal Nonesuch is exactly what the name implies. The fact that it sells out is an example of
Answer: D.Symbolism </span>
For the Cherokee, humans are equal to plants and animals. The Cherokee believe that animals had a major role in creating Earth.
A lot of Native American stories have been passed down for thousands of years and were mixed with reality and myth. These stories were believed to link both hunters and animals’ spirits.
Conceive - think of/imagine (1)
inhibit - stop/hold back (2)
tentative - immeadiete/right now (3)
verify - check on/see (4)
compensate - give someone something (5)
surpass - out grow/go beyond (6)
derive - Get, recieve, etc. (7)
supplement - fufill, fill up (8)
diversity - variety, lots of differences, (9)
moderate - small, cheap (10)
Bro, google is your friend. All you needed was to understand the definitions for this and you would of been fine... you could of used a thesaurus if the definitions google gave didn't make sense.
The correct answers for this question is this one:
<span>1. Lovers dream of: love
2. Courtiers (first mention) dream of: curtsies
3. Lawyers dream of: fees
4. Ladies dream of: kisses
5. Courtiers (second mention) dream of: fees
6. A parson dreams of: benefits or money
7. A soldier dreams of: war
</span>
Queen Mab is sometimes considered old-english for 'prostitute' here's where Shakespeare plays with his puns. In this case "Queen Mab" is the head fairy and brings BOTH good dreams and nightmares.