The answer:
Contemporary Portland, Oregon is the location of the settling of the passage, the key sentence is the e-mails grew briefer and less frequent. E-mails started to be used in 1971, this locates the passage in a contemporary time. The word contemporary talks about a present time or something that is happening right now.
A fishing community in Portland, Maine can't be selected as the correct answer because the passage doesn't present any information about commercial business in the area.
California during World War II can't be selected as correct either because of two reasons. First of all, we have the sentence -Then, Celeste moved to California - which shows that they were not located in California in the main part of the passage. Secondly, we have the sentence -Celeste wrote to say that she would be coming north to Portland by train for an interview at the university that she expected to attend-. During the war the role of women was focused on helping the army as nurses or even sometimes soldiers, collegue was not a common option for all women as it is now.
Answer:
How often does Mr. Thapa visit his sister?
Explanation:
Changing a sentence/ statement into a "how often" question means that the sentence will be a question and must be correctly punctuated with a question mark. Also, the question will start with the "how often" phrase and pose a question that the time phrase will answer.
This means that the time phrase "once a month" is the answer. Therefore, the question will be framed according to the answer. Also, the tense of the given sentence is simple present tense. So, the question form will also have the present tense.
Thus, the correct answer will be
<em><u>How often does Mr. Thapa visit his sister?</u></em>
Most likely the answer is an adjective
Explanation:
Dawdling means to move slow and it is describing how she moved.
Whoever is "drumming on his desk" needs to come right after the comma.
We know that whoever is drumming is a he ("drumming on HIS desk").
• Mrs. Hobson isn't a "he," so A is out.
• "Students" isn't a "he" either (because it's plural) so B is out.
• "Exams" can't drum, so C is out.
• That leaves D. Stewart is totally a dude, so that works fine.
The second sentence has a problem. The subject ("a lovely shade tree") comes right after the modifier, but the modifier DOESN'T refer to the lovely shade tree. That doesn't work. Right now the sentence is saying that the tree went for a long walk in the hot sun. So let's fix it:
• A is wrong, obviously.
• B works. The subject coming right after the modifier is "I," and that's who went on the walk.
• C repeats the error. It's still saying the tree went on a walk.
• D is not only confusing; it's also just wrong. It still says that the tree went on a walk.
Your answer to the first question is D. The second question is B.
Answer:
They do what Clemente wanted and celebrate him in the theatre