C looks to be right, normally when ¨and¨ theres no comma, but when there are two sentences theres normally a comma. plus when saying a title theres normally a :
Answer:
I believe the answer is Inner Strength
Explanation:
It seems that she has become hardened due to harsh experiences. It doesn't show that she has a weakness of spirit, because the excerpt does not allude to her being weak at all, quite the opposite actually. It's not carelessness either, it doesn't say that she's reckless in any way and gives no examples of this either. I don't think she desires revenge, at least not from what I've read from this short text. The key word: Insensibility. It means she is unfeeling, stoic. Usually, if someone desires revenge, they <em>feel </em>anger, resentment, venomous, but it sounds like Hester is just numb to the world. Stay cool.<3
<span>Millay finds beauty in the autumn world but resents the rebirth of spring because she sees death and sorrow everywhere.</span>
The pair of verb forms which correctly completes the sentence is the following one:
A. are; appears.
The complete sentence would look like this:
"Mercury and Venus are relatively close to the sun, and neither Mercury nor Venus appears to support life."
In the first clause, the subject is formed by "Mercury and Venus", which means it is plural, and therefore it requires a plural verb (<em>Mercury and Venus</em> are= <em>They</em> are).
In the second clause, there is a neither...nor construction, and both elements which form the subject (again, <em>Mercury and Venus</em>, but this time used in the construction <u>neither</u><u><em> Mercury </em></u><u>nor</u><u><em> Venus</em></u>) are singular nouns, which means a singular verb must be used: neither Mercury nor Venus <em>appears</em>.
It’s B , set far in the past