In her speech, “Ain’t I a Woman”, Truth highlights the inappropriateness in equality that was faced by both, men and women from African culture. This speech is one of the most profound speeches with a dominant message that later in time, found its craze among the listeners and readers. The choice of using the word “children” is critical in the speech. By speaking so, she tries to establish a connection between her and the audience. This places Truth in the character of a mother who is providing a deep lesson of compassion to her kids (audience).
Therefore, I am sure that "Option-B" is the correct choice.
Answer: The subject and verb do not agree.
The subject and verb in a sentence must agree with one another in number i.e. singular or plural. It means that if the subject is singular then the verb must also be singular. If the subject is plural then the verb must also be plural.
The given sentence is in the present tense so the noun and verb must form singular/plural in opposite ways: by adding 's' to the nouns and removing 's' from the verb to form singular.
The correct sentence would be: Brad and Alicia say they are available to babysit on Friday night.
B. Because irritate is the secondary meaning of annoy or bother.
The Great Passenger Pigeon Comeback began in 2012 with a central paradigm: de-extinction needed a model candidate. The goal of de-extinction for us, quite literally is revive and restore, and so the pilot project needed to be one that would have a chance of successfully returning the species to the wild.
We hypothesized the Passenger Pigeon could be a model de-extinction project. The Passenger Pigeon is certainly an iconic candidate. Conservation has often rallied behind iconic birds to galvanize environmental revolutions. The conservation movement itself formed in response to the extinction of the Passenger Pigeon. When the last birds were shot in the wild, mere decades after their population numbered in the billions, their absence from the skies demonstrated that even the most abundant of natural resources could be exhausted by unchecked human consumption, beginning a new age of conservation regulation and game management