Answer: CDC fights disease whether it starts at home or abroad, is infectious or not, occurs ... of CDC's best experts, and reflects both the Director's decades of research in ... this strategy highlights and reinforces major efforts and goals and is not inclusive of ... CDC is the nation's leader in seasonal influenza prevention and control.
Explanation: I hope it helps UwU
Answer:
The type of parenthetical element that refers to specific nouns and begins with words like who, whom, and where is:
B. relative clauses.
Explanation:
A relative clause, or adjective clause, always starts with a relative pronoun or a relative adverb. Its purpose is to tell us something about a specific noun. Since it is a clause, it must have a subject and a verb. Take a look at the example below:
- That is the girl that I met at the dinner party last night.
In the sentence above, the clause "that I met" gives us information about the noun "girl". It starts with the relative pronoun "that" and has a subject ("I") and a verb ("met").
NOTE: The relative clause above can have the relative pronoun omitted. However, when the clause has a relative pronoun that also functions as the subject, we cannot omit it, as is shown in the example below:
- That is the girl who thought the party was at 8:00.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
Audrey Hepburn also <em>lived</em> in Nazi-occupied Holland. Lived indicates that she used to live in Nazi-occupied Holland.
She <em>survived</em> the war and eventually <em>became</em> a movie star. Survived and became also both are in past tense, indicating that she did survive and then did become a movie star.
General Rules:Don't Use "a," "an," or "the" with a plural count noun when you mean "some of many things," "any," "in general.
Ex:"<span>Movies are entertaining (some movies; movies in general).
<span>
Ex:He likes women (in general).</span></span>