Of all the options listed, a Venn diagram and a compare-contrast chart would help the most with comparing two topics.
A numbered list isn't structured to compare topics, and is meant more for laying out information and making it easier to understand.
A cause/effect graphic organizer wouldn't necessarily be helpful to prepare for writing the essay, unless the topics had a correlated effect on each other (the cause/effect organizer would only work in certain situations, like comparing events).
I think maybe False because I don't think it depends on alphabetical order and that it just depends on the order in which you used the source(s)
Sorry for not explaining my answers cause there's a lot to answer but:
1 is compound
2 is interrogative
3 is clause
4 is simple
5 is conjunction i believe
6 is cause and effect
7 is inverted
8 is compound
9 is complex
10 is subject
11 is compound
12 is to buy
13 is to swim
14 is whom you met last week
15 is Since I do not want a hamburger, I will have a chicken sandwich.
16 is Even though our car broke down, we made it to the concert on time.
17 is whose, which, whom, that
18 is not there
19 is Traditional farmers
20 is The starving artist
21 is Each person
22 is We
In the winter you are most likely to see oak tree leaves still on the tree as many oak trees are evergreens, while almost all of the maple drop their leaves in the fall
Answer:
An animal
A banana
An accident
A teacher
A school
Explanation:
"A" and "An" are articles, which are a class of words that specify a noun within a sentence. Knowing when you will use "a" or "an" is very simple and you will only need to look at the first letter of the word that is written after these articles. If this word starts with a consonant, you must use the article "a," if the word starts with a vowel, you must use the article "an."