The towns respond to miners is:
B. They sold miners supplies and made a fortune.
<h3>The Klondike Gold Rush</h3>
- In the Klondike Gold Rush, stampeders were on their way to gold fields.
- They had little or no information about where they were heading to.
- About 100,000 gold-seekers set out to the gold fields but only 30,000 made it.
- Towns actually made fortunes from the miners by selling supplies to them.
Learn more about gold rush on brainly.com/question/25194986
Answer:
I will write one haiku
Explanation:
The clouds cried and cried
sad salty tears down the drain
raindrops everywhere
Answer:
<em>The best preparation for a game is </em><em>to practice until you know all the plays</em><em>.
</em>
<em>The crowd was excited</em><em> to see a great play.
</em>
<em>To cheer good plays made by both teams</em><em> is good sportsmanship.</em>
Explanation:
An infinitive phrase is a set of words, with an infinitive as its main part and with some modifiers and complements as an addition. All these words act as one phrase and have one function in a sentence (infinitive phrase can act as a noun or an adjective or an adverb).
Since nothing is underlined in these answers, let's find infinitive phrases for each of them:
-The best preparation for a game is to practice until you know all the plays - infinitive here is "to practice" but if we want to be more precise on the amount of practice and to modify this infinitive, then our phrase would be "to practice until you know all the plays".
- The crowd was excited to see a great play - the infinitive is "to see" but we don't know what, so the entire phrase is "to see a great play"
- To cheer good plays made by both teams is good sportsmanship - the infinitive is "to cheer" and the sentence "To cheer is good sportsmanship" could be valid. But, if we want to be more precise, we would say "to cheer good plays". Of course, we can go into even more details and say the entire phrase "to cheer food plays made by both teams"
In the play entitled Pygmalion, there was a part when someone said, "Y<span>ou're not going to let yourself marry that low common woman!", and then Eliza appears to have forgotten that she was 'low and common' not so long ago” and she said, “I don’t care how you treat me, but I wont be passed over".
So the answer is being passed over. I hope this answer helps.</span>
Answer:
she asked if she could open the window.
she asked whether she could open the windoe
Explanation:
plz note,shall does not change to should in this case