Answer:
3) The package arrived <u><em>while you were sleeping. </em></u>(Adverbial Clause)
4) Antonio read the newspaper <u><em>that Ishu bought</em></u> (Adjectival Clause)
5) The crowd became quiet <u><em>when he raised his hands.</em></u> (Adverbial Clause)
6) The squirrel <u><em>that bit her</em></u> didn’t have rabies. (Adjectival Clause)
7) Take the newspaper<u><em> when you leave.</em></u> (Adverbial Clause)
8) This engine operates more efficiently than the one <u><em>that I bought last week.</em></u> (Adjectival Clause)
9) The students all studied the material <u><em>so that they would pass the course. </em></u>(Adverbial Clause)
<u><em>Clauses:</em></u>
=> Adverbial Clauses usually start with so,when, while , where etc.
=> Adjectival clauses start with that, which etc.
Answer: using slang or otherwise informal language isn't trustworthy. It shows that the writer is taking the subject seriously and putting effort into their work.
Explanation:
I’m pretty sure it’s D, Walking is low impact, requires no fancy equipment, less likely to cause injury.
Something along the lines of seeing the jews treated as pigs on a farm if I remember correctly, I believe it is a reference to George Orwell's "Animal Farm".
It may be slightly off my memory is a bit foggy, but it's definitely the right concept I'm sure.
Explanation:
Emerson means that he sees everything; the metaphor suggests the poet is like a single, huge eye. I become a transparent eyeball; I am nothing; I see all; the currents of the Universal Being circulate through me; I am part or parcel of God.