A would be the sentence with a confusing antecedent, because the "he" could have been referring to "Uncle Arthur" or "Benjamin."
Answer:
A
Explanation:
it's obvious. why would he say what's not to love about this guy. they don't even know him personally.
Explanation:
The most devastating impact of the Great Depression was human suffering. In a short period of time, world output and standards of living dropped precipitously. As much as one-fourth of the labour force in industrialized countries was unable to find work in the early 1930s. follow me
No, the correct answer is not C. C should be punctuated with a period at the end. "I was wondering if you will be able to make it to my party." Indirect questions with like "I wonder if..." are written as statements although in informal texts or questions it is becoming more common to see a question mark.
The question that is correctly punctuated is "Can you come to my party or not?" We use a comma before conjunctions like or, and or but when we are linking two independent clauses like "I can come to your party, or I can go to James' party." However, we don't need one here between the two options as or not is not an independent clause.
The second question needs a question mark not a comma in the middle. "Didn't I tell you I could not come to your party? I could have sworn that I did."
The situation of pouring poison in a person's ear narrated in "Hamlet" has the symbolic meaning of contaminating a person's mind by telling them lies that mislead them into situations or actions that are incorrect or are against morality.
This symbolic meaning is the same used in the Bible when the snake, which represents the Devil, shows up in The Garden Of Eden and talked to Eva about the tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil and confused her with lies until she was manipulated to do what was consider incorrect or against the better judgement.