An adverb clause means that it has to be a full clause functioning like an adverb. This is the case in a): <span>Before you go to bed,
It's a clause (</span><span>"in our backyard garden| also has the function of an adverb but it's not a clause) and it's an adverb clause!</span>
You say it is strong but what does it mean Baldi says that if you have no meaning it doesn’t count ABD by the way for a specific word
<span>The
quotation you're being given is from a letter written in the middle of
the first century C.E. by St. Paul to a specific group of Christians in
Corinth (a city in Greece). He is describing one of the beliefs of the
new religion of Christianity, the belief that at the end of the world
("the last trumpet" or "last trump"), dead people will be restored to
life in new and perfect physical bodies that will last forever. </span>
I'd go with <span><em>B.To inform guests about the attractions available at Funland </em></span>
The correct answer among the choices provided is the option A. The lines from the play are "think of him as a serpent's egg/ Which hatched, would as his kind grow mischievous". Hatched serpent's egg represents the acquisition of power by Caesar. Brutus also thinks that Caesar will become a corrupt leader.