Answer:
He went there also. // He did go there.
Explanation:
The original sentence, if I may, needs a bit of rearranging for spelling.
<em>" He didn't go there either."</em>
Now.
There are affirmatives and negatives.
An affirmative simply states something; a positive sentence that means something is so. Whereas a negative is its polar opposite! Meaning something <em>is not</em> so.
The statement is a negative (from the looks of it XD), so the best answer that this could be along the lines of is
- "He did go there."
- or "He did also go there."
- or "He did go there too."
[ If it's not right, I am so sorry!! >-< I did my best. But I do hope this helps! ]
I believe the answer is the last one:
<u>He was the clear choice to go to Baltimore. </u>
The determiner that could be used before the noun money to refer to money in general could be some, for example. My, his, this, or something along these lines would make it sound too specific, so you couldn't use those.
We're at the midway point in the novel here, and introduced to Shmuel, Bruno's friend on the other side. But there's a catch: Shmuel isn't the only boy who wears striped pajamas, and no, we're not talking about his fellow prisoners. We dig into this big time over in the "Symbols" section, so be sure to check it out, but right now we'll leave you with this: Bruno puts them on, too. And when he does, we're pretty sure he's the boy in striped pajamas the title refers to.
Answer:
Value on which he believes the citizens to vote