Adjectives are word used to define or
modify a noun or pronoun. So the answer is B. noun and a pronoun.
<span>For example, She is exquisitely
pretty. The pronoun used is ‘she’ and the adjective is ‘exquisitely’.</span>
Answer:
They respond differently to their situation.
Explanation:
Based on the entire excerpt, the statement which best describes the Cuban exiles in Dreaming in Cuban is they respond differently to their situation.
Dreaming in Cuban is the first novel written by an author named Cristina García,a native of the United States, and she was a finalist for the National Book Award. This novel was published in 1992 by a publisher named
Alfred A. Knopf.
The novel moves amod Cuba and the United States featuring three generations of a single family. The novel center of interest was particularly on the women—Celia del Pino, her daughters Lourdes and Felicia, and her granddaughter Pilar.
In summary, The novel's central themes comprises or covers family relationships, exile, memory, and the divisiveness of politics.
Answer:
c. to explain that his attention and energy is still focused on the war.
Explanation:
Lincoln communicates he doesn't have even an inkling what will come next, yet will keep on update individuals and the war and completion the endeavors he started.
The symbol is the white umbrella, and it represents what the narrator wants to be, perfect, pure, etc. and that would mean that when she throws it away she is satisfied with the way she is now. The narrator is taught many lessons including acceptance. The narrator is taught acceptance because she regrets wishing Ms. Crosman was her mother. She also wanted to be part of American culture, and she was so embarrassed of her mother working. She was taught to accept things how they are in her life and be thankful for them because some people don’t have what she does.
In the story, Scout recounts how upset she is when Dill asks her to marry him and then promptly neglects her for Jem. Scout retaliates against Dill by beating him up twice, but opines that it "did no good, he only grew closer to Jem." As time progresses and Dill grows older, Scout experiences a more antagonistic relationship with Dill.