I think they saw nature in a spiritual way as the collective "Over-soul" of all the souls that create and reside in every form in creation. That means that very soul is one with and is the Over-soul, which some call God, but Dickinson and Whitman may have thought that word had to much connections to organized religion which has a different definition than they had.
Answer:
One dog could be overtly loving and one could bark at a simple engine rev. The dog that is loving wants to please you, wants you to show it love back. The other dog is scared, maybe the dog was hurt before so it wants to hurt you before you are able to hurt it. Its a sad thing, but dogs run on pure instinct, unlike humans who run on intuition.
Explanation:
Answer:
its answer is B.
Explanation:
B is the <em>correct</em> answer because it correctly sums up the main points of the passage.
A is <em>incorrect</em> as it implies that to the point opposite to that of the paragraph.
C is <em>incorrect</em> because it says what happens to Americans up to the Russians which is not true.
D is <em>incorrect </em> as it implies that nobody knows which is opposite to that of the paragraph.
The sentence which has a pronoun in the nominative case is, We aren't sure if the group is going white-water rafting or not.
<h2>
Option A.</h2>
Explanation:
When it comes to pronoun cases, there are three cases: nominative, possessive, and objective. The nominative case is mostly used when the subject of any sentence is pronoun. Nominative case pronouns includes: I, he/she, who, we, and they. For example: 'She drinks juices' here, the pronoun 'she' is the subject of the verb eats and she is the nominative case.
Similarly, in the sentence, 'We aren't sure if the group is going white-water rafting or not', the pronoun 'we' is the subject of the verb going and thus also a nominative case.