Most religious terms in English are from Anglo-Saxon origin.
True or False:
<u><em>False</em></u>
Most <u>religious terms</u> in English come from <u>Latin origin</u>. These terms were introduced during the <u>Roman Conquest</u> (43-84 AD) through the Romans' main language: Latin. Most of the Celtic and Anglo-Saxon religions that were practiced were slowly suppressed by <u>Christianity</u>. This process was officially achieved in the <u>year 597 </u>in which Augustine of Canterbury was sent by Gregory the Great with the intention of fully evangelizing England's population.
I would have to read the paragraph to give you a proper answer. Could you perhaps take a picture of the paragraph so I may read it?
Great Britain but some scholars seem to think United States as well. split view ♂️
Answer:
It is a pronoun
Explanation:
A pronoun is taking the place of a noun. Since you could replace a noun with it, like instead of "the book didnt move" it would be "it didnt move". While this is much less specific, it still counts as a pronoun.
Answer:
Humbaba's presence creates conflict and suspense.
Explanation: