Idiots :))) (personal thought)
The tree beside the Radley Place represents Boo's character and his desire to communicate. The children acknowledge this in their letter to him: 'Dear Sir... we appreciate everything which you have put into the tree for us' This tree symbolizes how Boo attempts to interact with the Finch children and wants them to know that he exists. He places different gifts inside a knot hole in the tree, so the children will retrieve them.
:))
Answer:
<em>Geometry has many practical uses in everyday life, such as measuring circumference, area and volume</em><em>.</em><em>.</em><em>.</em><em>.</em><em>.</em>
Explanation:
hope it's helpful for you
Here are the adverbs in this sentence:
<span>quite
</span><span>slowly
</span>eventually
really
However,
on the other hand,
but,
on the contrary,
nevertheless,
nonetheless,
In contrast,
The sentences that are correctly punctuated are Sentences B, C, and D.
Sentence A is not correctly punctuated as it is a run-on sentence. Contrary to what the name “run-on sentence” implies, a run-on sentence is not a sentence that runs on with lots of words. It, for instance, is entirely possible for a grammatically correct sentence to have, even, over a hundred words as long as it is properly punctuated. In fact, a run-on sentence is a sentence this simply missing punctuation. For a sentence to be considered a run-on sentence the appropriate punctuation will be missing between two complete thoughts. That said, Sentence A has two complete thoughts, and they are as follows:
<em>Some workers train dogs to become service dogs for people who need assistance
</em>
<em>
others workers accompany the mobile spay and neuter project for inner-city pet owners
</em>
There are three ways to correct a run-on sentence.
1) You could use a period between the two complete thoughts:
<em>Some workers train dogs to become service dogs for people who need assistance</em><em>. </em><em>Other workers accompany the mobile spay and neuter project for inner-city pet owners.
</em>
2) You could use a semicolon between the two complete thoughts:
<em>Some workers train dogs to become service dogs for people who need assistance</em><em>; </em><em>other workers accompany the mobile spay and neuter project for inner-city pet owners.
</em>
3) You could use a comma/conjunction between the two complete thoughts:
<em>Some workers train dogs to become service dogs for people who need assistance</em><em>, and </em><em>other workers accompany the mobile spay and neuter project for inner-city pet owners.
</em>