Your Correct Answer Is....
A) He Passed Easily.
≈≈≈≈ Glad I Could Help, And Good Luck! ≈≈≈≈
My Name: AnonymousGiantsFan
( The Book Of Three Series Is An Awesome One, Keep Reading All Of Them! There are 6 Books In Total, I Think. )
Choice A has an incorrect comma after brown. It should be absent to sound correct. To hear the difference in your head think "brown paper bag" versus "brown....paper bag".
Choice B lacks a comma after sunscreen.
Choice C correctly places commas when saying "not Karmen". This seems to be the correct answer.
Choice D is incorrect, it fail to put a comma after "a star on the swim team".
Choice C is the correct choice.
The Iroquois Constitution, also known as the Great Law of Peace. It is a great verbal narrative that documents the formation of a League of Six Nations: The nations are named:
- Cayuga,
- Onondaga,
- Mohawk,
- Oneida,
- Eneca, and later on, the Tuscarora nations.
<h3>What is the key thought in the Iroquois Constitution?</h3>
The constitution specifies how Confederacy meetings would be handled, as well as immigration regulations, foreign nation rights, and war laws.
<h3>How did the Iroquois federation come to be?</h3><h3 /><h3 />
The Iroquois Peacemaker story attributes the formation of the confederate states between 1570 and 1600 to Dekanawidah (the Peacemaker), a Huron who is believed to have convinced Hiawatha, an Onondaga residing among Mohawks, to advance:
- "peace,
- civil government,
- righteousness, and
- the great law".
Learn more about Iroquois constitution:
brainly.com/question/2925232
#SPJ1
They’ve theme is that the power belongs to the people and that it is the responsibility of the equal people to correct the government
The answer is:
The poem’s short sentences and simple structure emphasize the bleak reality of war.
Carl Sandburg's poem "Grass" is written in simple sentences and free verse, so it does not contain a systematic meter or rhyme pattern. In that respect, the author intends to direct attention to the dreary and desolate truth about war. In this way, the poem suggests that grass hides human degradation after war.