Answer:
Must use each of these once: Period, semi-colon, conjunction.
Explanation:
1. I love school, and I get good grades.
2. Baseball was America's part-time, but football is more popular now.
3. My Teacher assigns too much homework. I just don't have the time.
4. I am working; making a lot of money.
(hope this helps)
Science fiction is based imagined future scientific or technological advances and major social or environmental changes, frequently portraying space or time travel and life on other planets. realistic fiction is a genre consisting of stories that could have actually occurred to people or animals in a believable setting.
Answer:
D. It is a fragment and needs a subject.
Explanation:
"Flew through the meadow" describes something that an object does. It doesn't specify a subject and it doesn't make much sense without one. A good example of a subject for this sentence fragment would be "The bird" or "The butterfly", which would make the sentence "The bird/butterfly flew through the meadow." That would be a complete, logical sentence, since an object to perform the given action is present.
"C. By reviewing information in and around the unknown word."
When attempting to decipher the meaning of a new word, it is often useful to look at what comes before and after that word. The surrounding words can give readers helpful context clues about the meaning and structure of the new word, as well as how it is used.
As a Native American myself i would say,
The new US Government was careful not to antagonize the Indians and sought to treat them with mutual respect. This is evidenced in early treaties where the term “Red Brothers” was used to convey this sentiment of equality. By 1800 interaction between the Indian and white settlers had become quite common through trade. Many Indians traded for household goods, traps and tools. The US became concerned about the cultural differences and sought to improve the Indian station in life by providing education. The United States no longer feared the Indian but rather took a paternal position toward the Indians and the treaty language reflected this when the Indian was referred to as “Our Red Children.”