We can deduce that the author cites Thomas Friedman primarily to: Reveal his insights into the circumstances that inspired Friedman to invent the flat-world metaphor.
<h3>Who is Thomas Friedman?</h3>
Thomas Friedman actually refers to an author and political commentator. He is an American and a three-time Pulitzer Prize winner. He is known for his writings on global trade, globalization, foreign affairs, etc.
We see here that the author cites Thomas Friedman primarily to reveal his insights into the circumstances that inspired Friedman to invent the flat-world metaphor.
Learn more about Thomas Friedman on brainly.com/question/8190752
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The correct option is B.
“growing in the backyard” is correctly placed. If you were to rearrange the sentence, it wouldn’t make sense. Therefore, making the placement of that statement correct.
The sentence needs to flow and be easy to read for it to have no mistakes and for the statement to be correctly placed so that the sentence,
- flows
- makes logical sense
Hope this helps
-AaronWiseIsBae
The answer to your question would be that the definition that best identifies and explains the function of the word "tying" as it is used in this sentence is the following one: In the selected sentence, the word "tying" is a verbal that functions as an adverb.
A verbal is a word formed from a verb but functioning as a different part of speech. "Tying his shoe" is a participle phrase. In fact, it is present participle phrase, as it is created from the form of a verb used with the verb to be as an auxiliary verb (progressive tense). Removing the auxiliary verb and using the -ing form of the main verb produces a present participle. In this case the participle is functioning as an adverb because it is telling something about the manner in which Garrett prevented an embarrassing fall. He did this tying his shoe. You can tell this by asking the following question: How did Garrett prevent the embarrassing fall? Tying his shoe.
1. Im thinking the god's name could be Anthos.
2. He first tryed creating other planets, but failed, then succeeded at creating Earth.
3. He created plants, trees, insects, ect., probably because they were needed to balance out life.
If it didn't help, here's my myth
U can ask me questions about it:
There are the 2 gods, the God of Creation (Anthos) and the God of Destruction (Marthos) . Time and time again, Anthos would create life forms, planets, and even galaxies, and Marthos would destroy them (either to keep things in check or for fun). One day, Anthos had enough of this, so created planet Earth with creatures that were very dangerous and could also cause a decent amount of damage. When Marthos saw these creatures, he was amazed and left them alone for an extra million years, but eventually Marthos wiped them out.
Celebration for his birthday