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Readme [11.4K]
3 years ago
12

Which excerpt from Act 2 of The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street best reflects the idea that fear can lead people to make

English
2 answers:
Anvisha [2.4K]3 years ago
4 0

Answer: A

Explanation:

i just took the test and got a 100 so ik this is right please give brainliest

olga2289 [7]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

(A)  please mark Brainliest ;-;

Explanation:

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Choose the pronoun that agrees with its antecedent to complete the following sentence.The team won __________ fifth straight gam
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Answer:

their

Explanation:

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When ahmad reached home last night, his family________ their dinner.
Crazy boy [7]

Answer: B is the answer

Explanation: the sentence is in the past so you have to put had it's kinda hard to explain

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2 years ago
"Sonnet XXXI"
devlian [24]

Answer:

B. line 4 <em>That busy archer his sharp arrows tries?</em>

Explanation:

In Sonnet XXX or Sonnet 31, Philip Sydney (1554 – 1586) comments on the pale and sad appearance of moon, and he wonders why it is so. He asks the sun in line 4 whether there is also love which makes him pale and sad. He asks this by alluding to Cupid (the Roman god of love). Cupid is often portrayed with a bow and an arrow, and whoever is shot by that arrow falls in love. So, whoever falls in love is figuratively said to have been shot by Cupid's arrow.

The line 4 alludes to Cupid by calling him "that busy archer". Apart from this mythical allusion there is no allusion in this sonnet.

3 0
3 years ago
17. Who do these beautiful ornaments belong to?<br> Đổi
satela [25.4K]

Answer:

Whose beautiful ornaments are these?

Explanation:

The possessive nature of a noun is shown by using the word "whose" when asking questions. The word whose" is the possessive form of "who" and is used to ask questions relating to the relationship of a thing or idea with a noun.

In the given question, the noun is "beautiful ornaments". To ask the possessive question of who those beautiful ornaments belong to, we can use "whose" as follows-

<u><em>Whose beautiful ornaments are these?</em></u>

Here, "whose" is the possessive adjective showing possession followed by the noun "beautiful ornaments".

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3 years ago
Why were the police so willing to look at Walter McMillan as Rhonda's murderer even though it was clear the person who accused h
natita [175]

Answer:

Explanation:

https://eji.org/cases/walter-mcmillian/

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