No just once and that whole paragraph is suppose to be about that topic
<u>Explanation:</u>
Note, the term evidence simply refers to facts that are used to support a claim. While the analysis of evidence requires a description of the facts provided by the author.
The following are some questions we can ask when conducting an analysis of evidence:
- Is the evidence plausible to the claim made by the author?
- Is the evidence provided by the author sufficient?
- Is the evidence actually relevant to the claim made?
<span>C) Conflicted young lovers, mistaken identities, happy endings</span>
Answer:
B, "is situated"
Explanation:
Process of elimination:
A: The Oval Office is in the White House today, so the sentence should not be in the past tense.
C: This is not grammatically correct. The sentence needs a verb of a tense of "to be" like "is" or "was".
D: This is not grammatically correct. The sentence needs a verb of a tense of "to be" like "is" or "was". Also, since the Oval Office is singular, the word would be situates instead of situate anyway.
Answer: Stanley is arrested, Stanley digs a hole, Stanley's grandfather is cursed, Stanley is proud of himself.
Explanation:
In Chapters 6 and 7 of <em>Holes</em> by <em>Louis Sachar</em>, Stanley was first arrested for ''stealing'' baseball player Clyde Livingston’s sneakers. Stanley is then told to dig a hole which he finds hard at first but continues anyway.
The story then goes to Stanley's great-great-grandfather, Elya Yelnats being cursed for breaking a promise to Madame Zeroni that he would carry her to the top of a mountain and sing to her.
Back to the present, Stanley is still digging and is bleeding from his blisters but keeps going till he finishes and was proud of digging the hole.