Answer:
Charges are dropped.
Explanation:
He was arrested and sent to jail because he was protesting, the treatment of blacks in Alabama. The charges were dropped for sit-in arrest but is held for violating probation for earlier traffic offense and transferred to Reidsville State Prison.
;-;
The best way to punctuate the bolded portion of the quotation is the following:
C. them."-C.S. Lewis
This is the best way considering that the sentence ends on 'Lewis'. Periods always go inside quotations, as you can see from this brief description between different citing standards.
MLA: Commas and periods directly following quotations always go inside closing quotation marks. Question marks can vary depending if the question is part of the quote, then the punctuation mark goes inside the quotation marks. If the question is not part of the direct quote, it goes outside.
AP: All punctuation goes inside the closing quotation marks. This includes commas, periods, question marks and exclamation points.
Chicago: Periods and commas always go inside quotation marks. Question marks and exclamation points that are part of the original quote are included inside quotation marks.
I believe it's false but I'm not 100% sure.
Answer:
The following is the order the events occurred:
1️⃣ Stewart reluctantly agrees to allow Vivian to help maintain his racer.
2️⃣ Vivian begins to build her own soapbox racer for the next race.
3️⃣Stewart is skeptical Vivian can build her own racer since he needed help to build his.
4️⃣ After seeing a video of Stewart's soapbox race, Vivian wants to help him.
5️⃣Vivian has the best soapbox racer and wins first prize at the race.
Explanation:
From the excerpt, it can be clearly seen that the above order is correct.
Stewart reluctantly agreed to allow Vivian help him. Then Vivian begins to build her own racer. When Stewart that he wasn't sure Vivian will be able to her own racer. Vivian still tries to help Stewart but he refused. At last, Vivian won the prize.