Pretty sure it is B, because it isn’t C or A and there’s two houses now so therefore it’s B
<span>They can be the same, but not always. Circuit courts of appeals are one step below the Supreme Court, and are one step above the district courts. Any court above the local courts can be an appellate court if it hears appeals of the result of a case from a lower court.</span>
Strenuous chores outdoors, mothers and daughters toiled in the home, cooking, cleaning, and making clothes. This hardscrabble life proved increasingly difficult for young women, and by the early 1800s a growing number of Yankee farm families faced severe economic difficulties.
A. The error is the use of 'because' in a separate sentence. The conjunction 'because' links two clauses within the same sentence. The correct sentence would be:
<em>He went to the library because he wanted a book.</em>
B. The error is the lack of a conjunction linking the two clauses, this is, a conjunction like 'because' is missing.
<em>He went to the library </em><em>because </em><em>he wanted a book.</em>
C, <em>Went to the library </em>is a case of run-on sentence because it has no subject.
The structure of this run-on sentence is: <*Subject missing> + <Main Verb> + <Preposition> + <Determiner> + <Noun/Prepositional Object>
D. The clause <em>he went to the library </em> expresses a consequence and <em>he wanted a book</em> expresses a cause, therefore the use of 'after,' expressing time, as a linking word is incorrect. Only conjunctions like 'because' or 'so' can be used in this case.
<em>He went to the library </em><em>because </em><em>he wanted a book.</em>
<em>He wanted a book, </em><em>so</em><em> he went to the library.</em>
The top two decks carried the immigrants and although they had more space, the journey was still unpleasant. It was very dark in the lower deck and their was also a shortage of fresh air. Whereas those on the upper-deck had to contend with the stench rising constantly from below.