<span>The translation is closest to Spanish, but it really is Italian in origin. The phrase became a major part of the lexicon when Doris Day had a big hit with the song 'Que Sera, Sera'. 'Whatever will be, will be'means that the future is up in the air, and whatever is going to happen, is going to happen.</span>
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Well, since I had a look on the first words in the first sentence it become clear for me that the author included these sentence in order to provide a contrast to his group’s nonviolent efforts. Just because of the grammar structure of the lines, when it starts from ''The other'' we can predict that the speaker compares something with the excerpt represented above. I bet there was a previous introductory sentence that is connected with particular movement and further we can see ''the other" that reflects contrast.<span>
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Answer:
to entice the reader
Explanation:
you'd need to explore the connotations of the noun 'warning' it connotes deterrence and message . the purpose of an author is usually to spread a message so the author has deliberately started the passage with 'warning' to reassure the reader that they are here to bring the message , it could also be used to emphasise the dramatic his intended audience are as the warning also holds dramatic connotations , it could also allow the reader to relate with the author as they could both be seen as overly dramatic
Answer:
C.“Some concussions are much more serious than the symptoms would suggest,” says Dr. Monroe, a neurologist at the Brain Center.
Explanation:
Compared to all the other answers 'C' mentions a doctor (Dr.Monroe) and since you are trying to pick the answer that is most credible...picking the one that comes from the most knowledgeable source is the most credible. So, option C. is correct.
*P.S I also got it right on Edge2020*