B - agenda
An agenda is what the author really wants to point out (their underlying message) and it's typically written in a way where it's somewhat hidden. Example: political ads - they have an agenda for what they want to talk about and why it's important.
Answer:
education is important because if you have education you will be able to grow up and get a good job. the higher education you have the better job you have. if you have a good job you have good money. we should have free education because everyone should be successful or have a chance to be successful in life.
Explanation:
Answer:
Julius Caesar restored democracy to the Roman government
Explanation:
That's I have my mind
Hello! There are three commonly used rules when writing out numbers in literature.
The first one is numbers under "10" are written out as words (i.e 1-> one, 2-> two, 3-> three, ect)
The second one is if the number is representing a date, you write it in numerical form (i.e years stay in their number-forms)
The final rule is the one that applies for you is that if the number is the first word of the sentence, then you write it as a word instead of it's numerical form.
So the correct way you'd write your sentence is, "Twenty-six people posted messages to my blog in just thirty minutes."
They show us what God can accomplish through frail humanity. They provide a tangible lesson on being a Catholic and inspire us to live our faith more fully.