Answer: Samuel W. Westing, Berthe Erica crow, Flora Miller baumbach, George theodorakis, and Catherine theodorakis!
Answer:
b
Explanation:
This excerpt doesn't give much detail but I'm pretty sure this is Polyphemus speaking. He is a cyclops, and son of Poseidon. When Odysseus and his men were trapped in a cave with the giant man-eating cyclops, they plotted to blind him and escape. So Odysseus got Polyphemus drunk on some kind of wine and waited for him to pass out. Then they got a huge stick or branch, sharpened the end and plunged it into the giant's eye. One can easily surmise that Polyphemus would seek revenge for this, so answer B is definite. Answer A might be an additional factor, as Polyphemus does refer to him in this passage as "raider of cities"--indicating perhaps some disapproval--but the damage to his (only!) eye would be the most important issue, since that is personal.
<span>Reflects situations found only in African culture and a story of two lovers from different tribe in Nigeria. Nene and Nnaemeka loved each other however Nnaemeka is from Ibo and in their culture he must marry a girl from Ibo chosen by his father. The tension between Okeke and Nnaemeka started when Nnaemeka refused to marry the girl his father chose for him.</span>
Answer:
B. Weather Forecasts
Explanation:
This answer could be any of the other answers because they are specific and this answer is general.
I would believe this is a complex sentence. It contains a dependent and an independent clause to create one full sentence and a conjunctionn cannot combine the two clauses because of the questioning word in the very beginning of the sentence.