B
Pastries
Tastiest
I don’t know the 2nd one
Cross our hot
I think the best answer is to ignore them all. You will find alot of people with those characteristics but you can't just go around proving them wrong or right. Every successful person has atleast a hater. You will need those people to be successful but if you think about them alot they might cause you problems mentally. It's easy to say as given in the pic but hard to do. Ignore them but if you can everytime they say "You can't do it" prove them wrong :)
There are two prepositional phrases acting as adverbs in the given sentence: <em>in a fresh-water lake </em>and <em>in a chlorinated pool.</em>
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Explanation:
A prepositional phrase is a group of words consisting of a preposition, its object, and words modifying the object. Most commonly, they modify nouns and verbs and can function as adjectives, adverbs, or nouns. Prepositional phrases that function as adverbs are called adverb prepositional phrases.
In the sentence <em>Joe and Hannah, the twins next door to me, prefer to swim in a fresh-water lake rather than in a chlorinated pool </em>we can see two adverb prepositional phrases: <em>in a fresh-water lake </em>and <em>in a chlorinated pool. </em>They modify the verb <em>to swim</em>. Like adverbs that modify verbs, adverb prepositional phrases can give us information about where, when, why, how, and to what extent the action described by the verb takes place. In this case, we receive information about the location (<em>to swim</em> <u><em>in a fresh-water lake</em></u><em> </em>and <em>to swim</em> <u><em>in a chlorinated pool</em></u><em>).</em>
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Learn more about prepositions and prepositional phrases here: brainly.com/question/7439913
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I believe the answer is A
Macduff first becomes weary of Macbeth in Act II, scene iii, when Macbeth announces he has killed the guards. Earlier in the play, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth smear blood and leave bloody daggers by King Duncan's guards to frame the guards for King Duncan's murder. Macbeth says: "O, yet I do repent me of my fury, / That I did kill them," and Macduff's response is: "Wherefore did you so?" Macduff's response implies that he is initially suspicious -- why would Macbeth murder the only two witnesses available to explain what happened to the King? From this quote, the audience can derive that Macduff sees through Macbeth's lies. Macduff then decides he will "to Fife" (Fife is where Macduff is Thane) instead of Macbeth's coronation. He refuses to see Macbeth crowned as King of Scotland when Macduff believes Macbeth has been false.