The answer is A. <span>Heritage is embraced by carrying on family traditions.</span>
Section 14. Organizing Public Demonstrations - Community Tool Boxctb.ku.edu/en/table-of-contents/advocacy/direct-action/public-demonstrations/main<span>When might you want to organize a public demonstration? .... effective because it draws a crowd, often makes points in a humorous way .... In this circumstance, you might plan your counter-demonstration tobegin .... or document, prayer, etc. can be a powerful way to communicate a message, ..... Jossey-Bass;1st Edition.</span>
Hey there!
A correlating conjunction is a conjunction that uses two or more words within a sentence to combine two fragments or subjects. Examples of this would be "Neither Sally nor Joe could go to the meeting today," where "neither...nor" are the conjunctions, or "Not only did we snowboard today, but we also went ice skating at the lake," where "not only...but...also" are the conjunctions.
A coordinating conjunction is just one word used for the same purpose. An example of this would be "Tim was able to attend the meeting, but Sally and Joe were not," where "but" is the only conjunction.
Based on this, your answer will be a coordinating conjunction, since only one word is used to put your example sentence together.
Hope this helped you out! :–)
Man vs Man
Basically Tybalt hates Romeo and calls Romeo a "villain". Romeo says something about love towards Tybalt he says hes not a villain and he tells Tybalt that he doesn't understand him. Romeo says goodbye (he doesn't want to fight).
The bolded part is Tybalt not accepting what Romeo is saying. He says it doesn't "excuses the injuries", which means he doesn't forgive him (doesn't excuse Romeo's previous behaviour). Therefore "Turn and draw" means get ready to physically fight (draw out your sword)
Explanation: Have a good day! Brainliest? :D
I’ll have to say c because of the body of the paragraphs