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Among the choice provided above the <span>citations that is the correct format of works cited entry for this article is </span><span>C. Print.<span>Michael, Parfit. "Islands of the Pacific." National Geographic March 2003: 106-125. </span></span>
I think it would be
B
I am not 100% sure tho
Answer:
One conflict I have had in my past includes when my two aunts, harassed me and my mother. After my grandma got sick, they tried their best so make it impossible for my mother. They called Adult protective services and food stamps fraud on her. After my grandma died they stole my mother’s condolence money, which added up to be about $500. They changed me and my moms address at the post office so they got all of our mail for months before we noticed. Since then they contacted child protective services and told them that I, do not live with my mom, but with my dad, and that my mom has been taking advantage of collecting benefits like medical and food stamps. I have diabetes, so I could have lost all of my medicine because of their jealousy and evil souls.
Explanation:
The antecedent of a pronoun is basically the noun that a pronoun replaces, AKA the noun that the pronoun refers to. It should be somewhere before the pronoun in the sentence. In the sentence "Strikers will return to work when the union representative has completed their name negotiation," the pronoun is "their." Whose name negotiation is being completed? The strikers. This could read, "Strikers will return to work when the union representative has completed THE STRIKERS' name negotiation." That works! So, the pronoun "their" refers to the strikers.
Answer: strikers
Lord Capulet views marriage as a bargain, a contract, and a way to increase his family's standing in the community. Since Paris is a cousin of the Prince, Capulet believes that this marriage will bring honor and status to the Capulet family. He probably has the intention of using this to assert dominance over the Montagues. When describing Paris to Juliet he says he is "A gentleman of noble parentage / Of fair demesnes, youthful, and nobly train'd<span>" (Act 3, Scene 5). This shows that his main focus is Paris's status, rather than how he would actually be as a match for Juliet.
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Capulet does not even think of what Juliet might want, he says to Paris "I think she will be ruled / In all respects by me; nay, more, I doubt it not" (Act 3, Scene 4). This shows that he just assumes Juliet will agree to marry Paris because he said so. When she refuses, he reacts very badly. He says that if she does not agree to the wedding, she can "hang, beg, starve, die in
the streets, / <span>For, by my soul, I'll ne'er acknowledge thee" (Act 3, Scene 5). This shows the lengths he is willing to go to to punish Juliet if she does not agree, which reinforces his idea of marriage as a contractual agreement rather than something that is developed out of love. </span>