Take out the bare parts: the subject and verb: forests _____.
If you still can't tell, assimilate it to something easier. Let's say "they are".
Both "forests" and "they" are plural.
Now, you wouldn't say "they is"; the verb also has to be plural.
Back to "forests _____": forests contain. (A)
By the Process of Elimination, C and D are incorrect. You also cannot fill it out with "has contained" because that is singular. It would be "have contained", but that does not make sense in the context.
So, the final answer would sound like this:
The forests near my home contain many different types of trees and plants.
I hope that clarifies the problem (:
The answer is What have you done in my future?
Adam and Eve eat the apples to gain knowledge but at the cost of their promise to God, thus contributing to the theme of Betrayal.
Option B.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Eve in the story ate a fruit which was said to the fruit of knowledge. This fruit was ate by Eve to get knowledge and be intelligent. She also gave some of this to Adam.
This came as a betrayal to God because both of them had promised to god that they will both not eat it. But in the greed of knowledge, they ate it and broke the promise.
Answer:
B) Nature enriches us through memory even when we are far from it.
Explanation:
The question is from William Wordsworth's <em>I Wondered Lonely as a Cloud.</em> Wordsworth, being a romantic poet, appreciates the beauty and liveliness of nature. The major theme of the poem is the impact of nature on humans. The poet describes one of his solitary walks and his encounter with "A host, of golden daffodils". He describes the sight as, "Beside the lake, beneath the trees, Fluttering and dancing in the breeze."
Wordsworth then says that he envisions the sight again in his mind whenever he feels lonely. Now, even though he isn't currently watching them, just the thought of them of remembering them, puts him in a state of nostalgia.
Explanation:
what the story tells and what it is trying to betray.