Answer:
I'm pretty sure it's A.
although I can't see the speach.
Explanation:
The words for answer A are words that suggesting that they are working together.
Answer:
C. When did the War Department take charge of the Statue of Liberty?
Explanation:
In the given passage from "Welcome to the Statue of Liberty!", the underlined sentence is<em> "However, in 1902, the War Department began to oversee the responsibility."</em> So, to determine which question the given sentence answered, it is best to see what the questions/ options given are and how are they related to the underlined sentence.
Option A doesn't relate to the given sentence.
Option B asks a reason why the War Department was put in charge of the monument.
Option D asks the "where" of the U.S. Lighthouse Board's operation during 1901.
The only question that can answer the given underlined sentence is option C, which asks the time when the charge if the monument was taken by the War Department.
Thus, the correct answer is option C.
Answer:
b
Explanation:
This excerpt doesn't give much detail but I'm pretty sure this is Polyphemus speaking. He is a cyclops, and son of Poseidon. When Odysseus and his men were trapped in a cave with the giant man-eating cyclops, they plotted to blind him and escape. So Odysseus got Polyphemus drunk on some kind of wine and waited for him to pass out. Then they got a huge stick or branch, sharpened the end and plunged it into the giant's eye. One can easily surmise that Polyphemus would seek revenge for this, so answer B is definite. Answer A might be an additional factor, as Polyphemus does refer to him in this passage as "raider of cities"--indicating perhaps some disapproval--but the damage to his (only!) eye would be the most important issue, since that is personal.
The most common are 1st and 3rd person. 1st person is when you tell a story from your point of view, using the pronouns "I or we." And 3rd person is from an outside point of view, using the pronouns "he, she, and they." 2nd person isn't very common because it uses the pronoun "you," and makes the audience a character in the story. Hope this helps!