Answer:
B. crown; halo
Explanation:
The word crown has 3 types of root: coroune, croune, "royal crown, ornament for the head as a symbol of sovereignty," from Anglo-French coroune, Old French corone and directly from Latin corona "crown," originally "wreath, garland," related to Greek korōnē "anything curved, a kind of crown."
The word halo is described as a "ring of light around the sun or moon," from Latin halo, from Greek halos "disk of the sun or moon; ring of light around the sun or moon" (also "disk of a shield"); "threshing floor; garden," of unknown origin.
Sentences use semicolons in replace of a period. However semicolons cannot replace commas.
The sentence:
“He walked across the street quickly. He ran into a stop sign.”
Can be turned into:
“He walked across the street quickly; running into a stop sign.”
Imperfect heroes are those who present a history where good and evil are not simple, well-defined and well-defined concepts, but which mix, as in the real way. These heroes have problems defining what is right and what is wrong, in many moments, they have several traumas and problems, but they are able to endure their limitations and imperfections to promote what they believe is right. In other words, these characters believe that if they succeeded, in the midst of the imperfections they have to get where they are, it means that they can take it a little longer. In this sense, we can associate the Russian proverbial about the hero being "the one who can take another minute," with these characters, because they do not give up on good beings, even when it is difficult.