I would say the context clue for that would be " greetings from people who were excited to meet..."
I think it would be in an oxford English Dictionary
Not sure exactly what you are asking. However, <span>a plural noun
is a word that indicates there is more than one person, animal
place, thing, or idea. So when you talk about more than one of a person, animal, place, thing or idea (pretty much anything) then
you are using plural nouns. When you write about more than one of anything, you basically use the same word and add an "s", "es", or "ies" to the end of the word. Hope that answers what you are looking for. </span>
the correct answer would be...
C.martin has a conflict with himself about honoring his heritage because he thinks it will embarrass him.
An analogy (if there’s “like” or “as” in the sentence it’s a simile though)