Simple: We will go to the park then lunch.
Simple sentences follow a simple structure with Subject then verb. There is only one subject and one verb phrase to create a complete idea.
Compound: Let's go to the park first, and then we'll go to lunch.
A compound sentence combines two complete ideas into one sentence using either a semicolon or a comma with a conjunction. In this compound sentence the comma and conjunction "and" join the two complete ideas together.
Complex: After we go to the park, let's go to lunch.
This is a complex sentence. A complex sentence contains a dependent clause, "After we go to the park", and and independent clause, "let's go to lunch".
Compound complex: Let's go to the park first, and then we'll go to lunch since we'll be hungry.
A compound complex sentence contains both a compound sentence and a dependent clause. In this sentence the dependent clause is "since we'll be hungry". It was added to the compound sentence answer.
The answer is option A: It describes the author judging her mother based on her language.
In "Mother Tongue," the author Amy Tan expresses she used to feel embarrased by her mother's poor English. As an Chinese immigrant in America, the account states how Mrs Tan is not taken seriously. Since thoughts are expressed through language, even her own daughter Amy assumed her mother's concepts and knowledge were flawed or rudimentary, just like her English.
The statement about the events at the end of the Second World War that is true is A) The United States demanded huge reparation payments from Germany and Japan.
True since you are revising it