D.)
From what I know. Not sure if your talking about the book called “night” or something.
In the middle of the nineteenth century, as the Industrial Revolution began, the great manufacturing powers, above all Britain and the United States, were aggressively looking for new sources of raw materials and new markets for their products.
<u>Explanation:</u>
A history of the world in 100 objects was a project that was taken up jointly by the BBC radio and the British museum. It had in it a 100 part radio series thus it had the name of 100 objects in it.
These were written and presented by the director of the British museum whose name was Neil MacGregor.
Answer:
Wake up brush teeth, take a shower, get dressed, eat breakfast, do chores, go on a run, eat lunch, do homework, eat dinner, read a book.
Explanation:
I made them short
Answer:
C - Slang
Explanation:
Gibberish is typically only used by young children. Not appropriate here since you're likely not talking about a 3-5 year old.
Formal language is typically only used in a professional setting or with people you're not familiar with (i.e. not your family or friends)
Jargon is like slang, but it's used in a professional setting. Doctors use jargon when talking about diseases. Ex: A "JT" is a joint. This isn't slang you'd use unless you were in their workplace.
It's slang because we use slang when talking to someone we're familiar with and in a non-formal situation. Borrowing a bike from our brother is non-formal, and we're familiar with him.