B. It has proper grammar...
Nick, Jordan, Gatsby, Tom, and Daisy are having lunch. Tom notices Gatsby and Daisy looking at each other flirtatiously and gets suspicious. His suspicions in the end are correct when Gatsby declares that Daisy has always loved him, not Tom.
1. We will move the party from the deck into the house if the neighbors complain about the noise being too loud.
2. I listen to rock but Matt prefers reggae, which happens to have some pretty talented artist such as Bob Marley.
3. The grass has turned brown because it can no longer receive any nutrients.
1. When fall comes in the north, the leaves turn red and autumn begins.
2. I tried on the new jacket that Edna gave me but, I couldn’t fit it so I told her thanks for keeping me in mind but returned it to her.
3. After we have lunch, Dad will rake the leaves or wash his car.
The speech he delivered on March 23, 1775 is occupied with
emotional appeals. He used the rhetorical style. He started by describing the
affairs challenging the committee as ‘happenings of awful moment’, ‘a query of
freedom and slavery,’ but he gave an unforgettable phrase, ‘give me liberty or
give me death!’ Therefore, he was undoubtedly using pathos in his speech.