True although you might start to go insane
Answer:
Rampage during the Second Seminole War. Nominal end to conflict; no peace treaty, approximately 4,000 Seminoles forcibly transported to Indian Territory, and approximately 350 Seminoles remained in Florida, also unresolved conflict led to Third Seminole War in 1855.
The correct answer is A. Wanting to move because you found a great new school somewhere new.
Explanation:
In migration, a pull factor is one that attracts an individual to go to one place, for example, a job opportunity or better living conditions. This differs from a push factor because a push factor motivates a person to leave a place and move to a new one, for example, a war or lack of job opportunities.
In this context, the one that is an example of a pull factor is "Wanting to move because you found a great new school somewhere new" because a great school is a factor that pulls or attracts individuals to a new place. Also, other factors such as not enough resources, jobs, or no home make an individual leave a place or pushes him (push factors).
The right answer is C. attention, need, satisfaction, visualization, action. This is a sequence created by Alan Monroe in 1930 when he was working at Purdue University. This is a technical sequence created for the creation and planning of persuasive speeches that aim to inspire people to act. The sequence of steps indicates that you must first achieve the attention of the people, establish the problem to finally invite action.
I hope my answer can help you.
The third statement is correct.
Nick, who was our dorm advisor, and Joe, Nick's roommate, raised their concerns to the school residence office. They wanted to know why Dennis didn't have to share a room.
In the first statement, there are two subjects- Nick and Joe. However, "his" is used in the predicate referring only to one of the two subjects. This made the sentence incorrect. The same with the second statement. It used not only "his" in the first sentence, but it also used "he" in the second sentence referring to only one of the two subjects mentioned, instead of "they".