Answer:
If you want someone to answer your question, you have to show them the passage they're supposed to get the answer from. We're not mind reading robots lol
Explanation:
I think you need to elaborate. :)
Answer and Explanation:
"To those who saw him often he seemed almost like two men: one the merry monarch of the hunt and banquet and procession, the friend of children, the patron of every kind of sport; the other the cold, acute observer of the audience chamber or the Council, watching vigilantly, weighing arguments, refusing except under the stress of great events to speak his own mind."
Winston Churchill, "King Henry VIII," Churchill's History of the English- Speaking People's
The sentence's impact comes strongly when we get to know the contrasting side of King Henry VIII, which he presented in his speech. This sentence has more impact because he starts with nice and soft words: the friend of children, the patron of every kind of sport and then ends with harsh and cold words: weighing arguments, refusing, speak his mind.
You have to make the phrase given grammatically correct and then explain your answer on the line beneath it. In this case, the rewrite would be "no dogs allowed" because the apostrophe is possessive. You would only use such an apostrophe if you were to say, for example, "Susy's instrument" referring to something she possesses.