It depends on which word is underlined. If the underlined pronoun is his, then the antecedent is boy. If the underlined word is he, the antecedent is also boy. If the underlined word is it, the antecedent is B. date.
I would think that setting the scene of someone dying is appropriate to be in a bedroom where a sick person would most likely be (if not in a hospital) such as someone in palliative care for example and the bedroom stillness is commented on broken only by a fly and whose buzz perhaps accentuated the otherwise stillness. If the person's death was outside or in a public place it would more likely be the result of a, say an accident, or say an assassination such as that of Martin Luther King so since it is inside in a bedroom it indicates the dying is just a normal death from illness and/or old age.
Answer:
um
Explanation:
don't get too political¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Let's take a look at the phrase:
<span> Jealousies will be always arising;
insurrections will be constantly happening
both parts have the structure of
noun-plurar WILL BE adverb verb-ING.
So we see that both parts have a similar structure; we call it a parallel structure - the strategy is parallelism, the use of parallel structures to highlight a similarity between two things
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