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Sidana [21]
4 years ago
4

Which sentence correctly uses a hyphen?

English
2 answers:
Dmitriy789 [7]4 years ago
7 0
     I think the answer to your question would be D. <span>Ann's birthday is in mid-September.</span>
melamori03 [73]4 years ago
4 0

The sentence that correctly uses the hyphen is D, "Ann's birthday is in mid-September.

It is common to use hyphens before prefixes, such as mid. Other examples of prefixes include self, ex, and pre. The other examples incorrectly use the hyphen.

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Can someone help me get started with this or give me an example of. There is no wrong or right answer but its just an opinion. U
Vinil7 [7]

Answer:

If I had a life filled with peace I would:

Explanation:

read a book outside.

meditate with no background noise

watch a movie in silence

write a poem

and paint something outside

5 0
3 years ago
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What can the reader conclude about the narrator's belief about his work?
baherus [9]

The inference that the reader can conclude about the narrator's belief about his work is that B. He is overqualified for the type of work he does and he is underappreciated by his employer.

<h3>What is an inference?</h3>

It should be noted that the inference is the conclusion that hat can be gotten based on the information that's given in the story. It should be noted that this is important in a literary work.

It should be noted that the narrator complained about how he wants respected enough.

Therefore, the inference that the reader can conclude about the narrator's belief about his work is that he is overqualified for the type of work he does and he is underappreciated by his employer.

Learn more about inference on:

brainly.com/question/25280941

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6 0
1 year ago
Which would be a reason for an author to choose to use a third-person omniscient narrator?. A.. The author would want the reader
olga nikolaevna [1]
<span>C. The author would want the reader to have a more reliable and objective narrator. This would be the answer hope this helps!</span>
4 0
3 years ago
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How does a CENTRAL IDEA develop over the course of a story?
Svetach [21]

Answer:

Explanation:

A central idea is like a lesson. Usually the idea is carried through a character, for example, Harry Potter and his friends teach us to persist through the hardest of challenges. But that central idea can't just be there in the beginning, it has to develop over time until Harry completes his hero's journey. Central ideas are also further explained at the end of the book when it ties everything together.

3 0
3 years ago
23. Some groups feel as though all farmers should have to pay to repair damage from nonpoint pollution from sediment and chemica
Neko [114]

Answer:

Hi myself Shrushtee.

Explanation:

Almost everything humans do, from growing food to manufacturing products to generating electricity, has the potential to release pollution into the environment. Regulatory agencies charged with protecting the environment identify two main categories of pollution: point-source and nonpoint-source pollution.

Point-source pollution is easy to identify. As the name suggests, it comes from a single place. Nonpoint-source pollution is harder to identify and harder to address. It is pollution that comes from many places, all at once.

The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) defines point source pollution as any contaminant that enters the environment from an easily identified and confined place. Examples include smokestacks, discharge pipes, and drainage ditches.

Factories and power plants can be a source of point-source pollution, affecting both air and water. Smokestacks may spew carbon monoxide, heavy metal, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, or “particulate matter” (small particles) into the air. Oil refineries, paper mills, and auto plants that use water as part of their manufacturing processes can discharge effluent—wastewater containing harmful chemical pollutants—into rivers, lakes, or the ocean.

Municipal wastewater treatment plants are another common source of point-source pollution. Effluent from a treatment plant can introduce nutrients and harmful microbes into waterways. Nutrients can cause a rampant growth of algae in water.

Nonpoint-source pollution is the opposite of point-source pollution, with pollutants released in a wide area. As an example, picture a city street during a thunderstorm. As rainwater flows over asphalt, it washes away drops of oil that leaked from car engines, particles of tire rubber, dog waste, and trash. The runoff goes into a storm sewer and ends up in a nearby river. Runoff is a major cause of nonpoint-source pollution. It is a big problem in cities because of all the hard surfaces, including streets and roofs. The amount of pollutants washed from a single city block might be small, but when you add up the miles and miles of pavement in a big city you get a big problem.

In rural areas, runoff can wash sediment from the roads in a logged-over forest tract. It can also carry acid from abandoned mines and flush pesticides and fertilizer from farm fields. All of this pollution is likely to wind up in streams, rivers, and lakes.

Airborne pollutants are major contributors to acid rain. It forms in the atmosphere when sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides combine with water. Because acid rain results from the long-range movement of those pollutants from many factories and power plants, it is considered nonpoint-source pollution.

In the United States, the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act have helped to limit both point-source and nonpoint-source pollution. Thanks to these two legislative initiatives, in effect for some 50 years now, America’s air and water are cleaner today than they were for most of the 20th century.

<em><u>P</u></em><em><u>lease</u></em><em><u> mark</u></em><em><u> me</u></em><em><u> as</u></em>

8 0
3 years ago
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