There’s nothing really unlined but just from reading this it sound like it is a demand for change. So C
Answer:
The author´s use of apostrophe in the poem "85", engages readers by addressing them directly.
Explanation:
<span>We usually drop the 'e' at the end of words when adding an ending that begins with a vowel suffix (e.g. -ing, -ed, -er, -able, -ous, ).</span><span>But with words ending in 'ge' keep the 'e' before 'able' to keep the soft 'ge' sound-
manageable, changeable, knowledgeable...
<span>We also keep the 'e' in words ending in 'ce' before 'able' to keep the soft 'c' ( "s") sound-
noticeable, replaceable, serviceable...
<span>Another exception to the rule is the final -e is not dropped from words ending in: -ee, -oe, -ye.
see - seeing, agree - agreeing, canoe - canoeist, dye - dyeing</span></span></span>
The answer is: most famous feature.
An adverbial phrase can contain one or more words which function as an adverb, being the adverb the head word of the phrase. Thus, they modify an adjective, a verb or another adverb. In the example sentence, the word most is the adverb, which means to the greatest extent.
The phrase "its ring system" is a noun phrase, "of ice particles" is a prepositional phrase, and "that is made" is a defining relative clause.