Answer:
unremarkably
Explanation:
Un- and -ly
Could you please mark me as brainliest? I only need 2 more until I reach the next level?
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The statement from Governor George Wallace's inaugural address best serves as conflicting evidence for King’s statement is each separate political station makes its contribution to our lives. Thus, option "B" is correct.
<h3>What is the evidence for King’s statement?</h3>
A famous phrase from the Inaugural Address of Governor George Wallace in 1963 is “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever”. Segregation means keeping people from different groups, especially different races, separate.
Wallace’s ideas, which were associated with racism, were a sharp contrast to Martin Luther King Jr.’s ideas. This is why Martin Luther King Jr. responded to Wallace's inaugural address in several occasions. In his “The American Dream” speech, Martin Luther King Jr. argues that there should not be segregation, since “no individual can live alone: no nation can live alone”.
Thus, option "B" is correct.
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"I haven't seen anything that looks familiar", David said to Geena
LOL. As there is 26 letters in the alphabet there is no middle !
The correct answer is “The authors include details about the changes in diets over time to inform readers about how sugar has transformed what we eat.” Although there is a hidden subtext that indicates that modern diets are indeed unhealthy because of the excessive intake of sugar, the author’s main concern is to illustrate above all the economic importance of sugar and how it affects other unrelated issues. It also provides hints as to what such importance means for nutrition, social justice and economic justice. The author does that by enumerating the historical facts about the indirect and direct effects of sugar on the lives of people (poor factory workers, slaves), the effect on the economy (the wealth they gained, the trade connections they made, and the banking systems they developed in the slave and sugar trade), the effect on culinary practices (jams, cakes, syrups, and tea) and finally its effects on human health (Americans eat an average of 140 pounds every year).