-ily makes and adverb (speddily, hastily,etc)
-ible makes and adjective (fallible,incorrigible, etc)
-ity makes a noun (pity, identity)
-ate makes a verb (elongate, interrigate, etc)
Chase was a bitter. A noun from the beginning sentences is Chase it is a person name. Bitter is a adjective.
Hopes it helped
The claim of a piece of writing is essentially the same as
its thesis. The thesis, as such, will
generally be presented in the first paragraph (if not the first few lines) of
the text. When we look at the article,
thus, the first paragraph mentions two things:
a gorilla named Little Joe (the hook/attention getter) and that zoos do
a good job at nurturing their animals.
Readers can be safe to assume that the article will cover how zoos do a
good job at nurturing because of how the last sentence within the introductory
paragraph begins with “But less well covered was the very real success…” As such, the claim of this piece is that zoos
succeed at nurturing the animals that live within their walls. Again, it’s important to remember how,
generally, the thesis turns out to be the claim.
Answer:
B. The skydivers ....
Explanation:
ambulance, NOT ambulatory
Belief in the supernatural.
A main point of the Romantic era was the idea of intense emotional expression and the individual self, however it also dealt with an interest in supernatural interest and mysticism. There is a lot of influence from greek and roman mythology and the power of supernatural forces, so this makes the most sense.