This seems like more of a personal thing, i can give you some guidance: let's say you believe strongly in a specific political or philosophical view point. when someone breaks this viewpoint how does that make you feel? hope that helps
Not sure about number three in regards to the literary movement; however, i can help you with the last two.
"the collars belonging to the cats" -- there are multiple collars, and multiple cats. the way to represent this is "the cats' collars." you add the apostrophe to the cats, because the multiple cats own the collars.
"the notebooks belonging to Janet" -- here, you have multiple notebooks, but only one janet. the way to show this is "Janet's notebooks." the possessive s is added to janet's name to show that the notebooks are hers. the possessive s or apostrophe would not apply to notebooks, because the notebooks don't own anything. only janet owns something.
The tone of the person that is reading it and the background noise
I can’t think of a third one
Answer:
C
Explanation:
"A noun clause is a dependent clause that acts as a noun. Noun clauses begin with words such as how, that, what, whatever, when, where, whether, which, whichever, who, whoever, whom, whomever, and why. Noun clauses can act as subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, predicate nominatives, or objects of a preposition."
Answer:
I dont know who Mr. Marsden is because i can t see the parargaph as to his actions and such.
Explanation:
Use the A.C.E. Strategy to answer the question in paragraph format: What can you infer Mr. Marsden is trying to do? What do his actions suggest about his character? Cite textual evidence to support your answer.