The answer is:
My mother is very tall but my father is even taller.
Conjunctions join clauses, words and phrases and they are usually used to avoid a sequence of short sentences. For example, <em>and, but, </em>and <em>or</em>.
In this case, the most suitable sentences to combine with a conjunction like "but" are the ones whose subjects are related (mother and father) and whose predicates have a similar structure: both describe height and one has a comparative form of the adjective tall, so they can be easily joined.
They don't have weaknesses cause they don't even exists
Poetic language should be the right answer
Answer:
by referencing common childhood experiences that emphasize her feelings of being in limbo
Explanation:
This question is about the article "Am I rootless, or am I free?" where the author reflects on being a person who did not grow up in a single culture, but in a mixture of cultures from different places. According to the author, these experiences make her feel that no culture is hers, no country she lived in is really her home, she feels in limbo and wonders how she would have felt if she had the experiences that ordinary children you can have a best childhood friend and have a house with walls marked with its different dimensions during growth.
It's brothers brothers fight and they look to belong they always grew on the outside of society and they always like to hang together