I am pretty sure it is "became". Hope that helped :)
Since you didn't provide the excerpt, I am going to assume that the answer you need is 'hearken'.
Answer:
An email to cousin Prateek to inform that his father has sustained minor injuries and is at present out of danger after the bomb blast in Sarojini Nagar snuffed out a number of lives.
Explanation:
B Avenue, 1st Lane, 09.01.2020
Addison, Dallas County,
Texas
75001
Dear Prateek,
I know you are worried and must have tried reaching out to us a million times but the communication and internet lines were down for many days after the attack happened. I'm glad that I can write to now after so many days.
We were supposed to meet Sunil uncle and Aarti aunty on the day the blast took place. When we were about to leave, we received the news that a bomb blast had happened in Sarojini Nagar that morning. On top of it, Aarti aunty's call got all of us panicked. Sunil uncle had gone to the same area for some work and hadn't returned for hours which got her worried. Then the news was flashed on the news channels and radio shows which caused the alarm. My father and I rushed to the hospitals near to that site and looked for Sunil uncle. After searching for the entire afternoon, we found him admitted in N.H. Care. Thankfully, he had sustained minor injuries and was kept under observation. It has been 5 days since he is out of danger and yesterday he even got discharged.
We are all safe and doing better now. Will be waiting for your reply.
Your loving brother,
Prakash
Causing lighthearted laughter and amusement
Explanation:
Explanation:
Noam ChomskAs Chomsky’s work continued, he posed a novel approach to thinking about language, called the theory of Universal Grammar. This intricate theory includes the idea that humans are genetically endowed with knowledge of the linguistic features of which language is composed and the ability to determine how those features are organized into the language(s) they hear around them. y is known as the father of modern linguistics. Back in 1957, Chomsky, with his revolutionary book “Syntactic Structures,” laid the foundation of his non-empiricist theory of language. Two years later, with his review of B. F. Skinner’s “Verbal Behavior,” he argued that Behaviorism, the dominant approach to language at the time, was no longer to be the way of studying language.