The answer is:
<em>A) Aside from a few fresh ingredients, fast food is preproduced, resembling a science experiment more than food preparation.</em>
Because it explains, shortly, the main idea that the text tells.
Fast food preparations methods now are less likely to be found in cookbooks and more likely to be found in trade journals (like a science experiment would), because, everything is already prepoduced (aside some vegetables - fresh ingredients -).
Answer: Sometimes you just have to convinse them to believe you and this is your life so your parents don't have to make you do things that they want.
Explanation:
Answer:
2. My grandma <u>goes</u> to the gym once a week!
3. We <u>aren't playing </u>tennis today. The match is cancelled.
4. How often <u>do you go</u> to the dentist?
5. My mum really <u>likes </u>rap music.
6. Dad's at home. He<u> isn't working</u> today.
7. Jenny <u>thinks </u>Johnny Depp is a great actor.
8. My aunt and uncle <u>are staying </u>for dinner tonight.
Explanation:
The tense we use to talk about things that are happening right now is called the present tense. Depending on the nature of the actions/events we're talking about, we can use one out of four types of the present tense: the present simple, present continuous, present perfect simple, or present perfect continuous tense.
We use the present simple tense when we want to talk about fixed habits or routines, i.e. things that don't change.
We use the present continuous tense when we want to talk about actions or conditions that are happening now, frequently, and may continue into the future.
The logical connection is absent. The answer lacks any explanation to the question being made. The main problem is that the interviewer is left with a very incomplete response, one that requires a lot of work from part of the interviewer. In this case in particular, even if there were a connection between reducing rates and unemployment, it seems that the candidate does not really have an answer to the question. That is why the fallacy is the lack of connection or relevance between the question and the answer
Answer:
You can use this as a opening line, "Summer vacation ended, and hell began all over again."
It may be not well received though.