Answer:
9. A) The Starfish
10. A) The sky
11. D) Collected
12. C) Rosie found a new thing to love
13. Rose climbed on her father's shoulders so that she could be closer to the stars.
14. The starfish lived in the ocean.
Explanation:
The given passage is an adaptation of the story <em>The Strange Star</em> written by Anita N. Amin. Another title that best suits it is<em> The Starfish. </em>The starfish is the strange star Rosie discovers. The story tells about how her love for stars in the sky taught her about another creature that resembles them. This is how the starfish becomes the most important thing in the story, which is why option A is the best one.
In the second question, we need to find the phrase substituted by the pronoun <em>it</em>. This phrase is <em>the sky.</em> We can see that here: <em>Rosie loved watching the </em><u><em>night sky. It</em></u><em> shined with so many stars.</em> Only the sky mentioned in the previous sentence can shine with stars.
The words <em>gathered</em><em> </em>and <em>collected </em>have the same meaning. When you're unsure about what a word means, you can look it up in a dictionary.
In the second paragraph, we can see how Rosie found the starfish and fell in love with it. This is why we can say that the main idea here is that Rosie found a new thing to love. We can confirm this with the help of the following sentence: <em>Now, she loves both of them. </em>
I'm. Or sure but I think the answer is d
Answer and Explanation:
I don't know the context but I think it is because she wanted to impress someone or she wanted others to not see her as something of a low and having nothing or being poor.
<em><u>#teamtrees #PAW (Plant And Water)</u></em>
Both would be fine, I prefer to the one that takes most energy first.
if you were writing the essay, I would start with the essay because it uses a lot of energy from your hand.
If you were typing it, I'd start with math because it uses your brain a bit more.
Honestly, I don't really get what you mean by using energy but that was my best.
A. Add a comma and but only once the paint dries after again