<u>Answer:</u>
“All” is a determiner: Distributive determiners.
<u>Explanation:</u>
“Determiners” are words that come prior to a noun. Like, in the sentence, 'A' dog is barking. Here A is a determiner before the noun 'dog'. All articles, possessive pronouns like "my, your, his, her" and numbers like one, ten are determiners. Distributives like all, half, both are also determiners.
Articles are "a, an and the". When we want to refer to specific noun like Taj Mahal, we use ''the”. It is called definite article. In case of unspecific nouns like apple, mango, table, we use a or an. “An” is used before "vowels" (a, e, i, o, u). This is called indefinite article.
Answer:
The characters in the short story "Where is Here" do not have names. There is a family of four: a mother, a father, and two children, and a stranger.
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The answer is g is the answer
Answer:
C makes the most sense out of all these.
The best counterclaim for Taney's statement would be <em>"Because Dred Scott and his family were born in the United States, they are citizens with all the rights granted by Constitution"</em>
<em> </em>This counterclaim can be found in the Citizenship Clause (1868), present in the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution -<em> "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside." </em> -that, by the time Dred Scott v. Sandford courts' decision it didn't existed yet. The Citizenship Clause act as a reparation to African Americans, who were seen before only as a object and private good.
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