I believe you’re talking about a prepositional phrase. Ex: On the table, in the kitchen.
Answer:
The top one i think or it would be the bottom one but the bottom one makes more sense
I have found the excerpt and the choices from another source. I will paste them below:
<span>They laughed at his wild excess of speech, of feeling, and of gesture. They were silent before the maniac fury of his sprees, which occurred almost punctually every two months, and lasted two or three days. They picked him foul and witless from the cobbles, and brought him home . . . . And always they handled him with tender care, feeling something strange and proud and glorious lost in [him]. . . . He was a stranger to them: no one—not even Eliza—ever called him by his first name. He was—and remained thereafter—"Mister" Gant. . . .
</span>A. They spread gossip about his unusual conduct.
B. They consider him a talented man and good friend.
C. They think he is a bit peculiar, yet they revere him.
D. They worry about his excessive behaviors.
The excerpt would tell us that Oliver's neighbors (C) think he is a bit peculiar, yet they revere him.
We know that the neighbors think Oliver is peculiar or strange through the first half of the excerpt and from the line "he was a stranger to them". Despite this strangeness though, we can also infer that the neighbors revere or deeply respect him because they still "handled him with tender care".
Dionysius’s desire for total control and power affect the story’s plot in “Damon and Pythias” when Dionysius character was hot - tempered and imperious and anyone who angered him was put to death. In this situation, people in Syracuse were afraid to make a statement about him because they will be put to death. And so when a day came that he was informed that a young man named Pythias had been heard complaining against the cruelty of Dionysius, he condemned the youth to die.
Answer:
True
Explanation:
In his conversation with Euthydemus, Socrates talked about the interconnectedness of wisdom and virtue. First, Wisdom is one of the five virtues but Socrates, in deeply analyzing the matter showed that people are wise by what they know (knowledge). He therefore deduced that Wisdom is Knowledge.
Virtue is the act of doing that which is beautiful and good. It takes a wise person to do that which is beautiful and good. Therefore, virtue is wisdom.