Answer:
Answer:
A: When you give something a chance, sometimes your opinion of it may change for the better.
Explanation:
While reading the story, Tanisha thinks of the camera in a negative light, only saying bad things about it, and when she finally decides to use it it's out of boredom and not curiosity (She is only curious about why her father values it so much.)
B If that was the author's point, they would've included more nature in the story, and not make Tanisha's feelings about the camera so visible.
C If the author's point was to bash social media and blame it for the world's problems, they wouldn't have talked much about the antique camera, focusing more on Tanisha's life on social media and making it a bigger problem throughout the story.
D The author didn't mention Tanisha's father a lot, except for when Tanisha was thinking back to how she got the camera. They also didn't push the father's opinions onto the reader, he only valued the camera and gifted it to his daughter. Although they don't need to have somebody's opinions pushed onto you to get their point across, it would've made this option make more sense if that was their point.
Answer:
Every single day, millions of people use butter for almost everything, but did you ever stop to ask how is butter even made?
Explanation:
I hope this helps :)
Answer:
Their
Explanation:
The possessive case is used for showing possession and can apply to nouns, pronouns and determiners. ‘Their’ is a possessive case determiner and shows that something belongs to someone.
Answer:
Demonstrative
Explanation:
<em>Those </em>is a word for a demonstrative pronoun.
Demonstrative pronouns are those that are identifying and pointing out something. They can point out a person, a place, a moment, and can be singular or plural.
However,<u> in this specific sentence, there is no pronoun, but those is used as a demonstrative adjective. </u>
The words for demonstrative adjectives and pronouns are the same (<em>this, these, that, those</em>), but the difference is that the pronouns stand-alone, <u>adjectives stand with the noun and modify it.</u> The only difference is in the structure of the sentence.
<em>Those </em>stands with the word <em>scouts </em>and modifies it, showing us which scouts do we talk about. <u>That is how we know it is the case of the adjective and not the pronoun. </u>