Romeo and Juliet meet at Capulet's ball and fall in love = expositionPrince Escalus banishes Romeo from Verona = rising actionLady Capulet and the Nurse discuss the merit of Count Paris = climaxFriar Laurence gives Juliet the sleeping potion = falling actionThe Montagues and the Capulets end their feud = denouement
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Adamant means insistent or determined. It means refusing to change one's mind.
Here, she is so adamant that the speaker eats a healthy breakfast that she chases down the bus. That means she is very determined and uncompromising. The speaker WILL eat breakfast!
Answer:
Comma + present participle modifier is used to refer to the complete preceding clause - the modifier describes the result of the preceding clause or explains how the action in the preceding clause is done. Here the present participle "selling nearly...." is required to describe how Argentina became the leading exporter. Thus option D and E are left. IN option D the pronoun "It" does not a valid antecedent. Hence E is the best option among the given.
However in option E, the prepositional phrase "with almost half going.." refers in turn to the present participle modifier "selling..." - such usage is generally considered awkward in GMAT. A better, more GMAT-like construction would be:
In little more than a decade, Argentina has become the world’s leading exporter of honey, selling to foreign markets nearly 90,000 tons a year, half going to United States.
OR
In little more than a decade, Argentina has become the world’s leading exporter of honey, selling to foreign markets nearly 90,000 tons a year, half of them going to United States.
OR
In little more than a decade, Argentina has become the world’s leading exporter of honey, selling to foreign markets nearly 90,000 tons a year, half of which went to United States.
The above three alternatives show the correct usage of three different forms of subgroup modifier (referring to "90,000 tons").
Answer: the 3rd one sound good
Explanation:
C is the answer because in <span>dialogue we have word that are said by a character</span>