Answer:
B. crown; halo
Explanation:
The word crown has 3 types of root: coroune, croune, "royal crown, ornament for the head as a symbol of sovereignty," from Anglo-French coroune, Old French corone and directly from Latin corona "crown," originally "wreath, garland," related to Greek korōnē "anything curved, a kind of crown."
The word halo is described as a "ring of light around the sun or moon," from Latin halo, from Greek halos "disk of the sun or moon; ring of light around the sun or moon" (also "disk of a shield"); "threshing floor; garden," of unknown origin.
Because the man liked her.
My cousin has to put butter into pan for the fish but my cousin refusal and put oil.
Answer:
This is a sort of tricky question! The first rewrite isn't grammatically correct, so I wouldn't use that one, and the second one still sounds negative, or aggressive. Maybe, 'I haven't enjoyed any of the films they have made this year.' or 'The films they have made this year aren't very likable.'