Answer:
I found the option in another post. So if they are:
A-People don't always get what they want.
B-Love is always near if people look for it.
C- Love is easy to come by for most people.
D- People are always hurt by other people.
It might be said that the correct option is A People don't always get what they want. She tried to portray the idea that love is not easy to win and she enhanced this idea by using her personal experience (her memories).
Explanation:
Answer:
Language is always changing. We've seen that language changes across space and across social group. Language also varies across time.
Explanation:
You can shape community behavior with positive language. ... The words that we use to refer to people change how we treat those people.
The words "breach in nature" represent the idea that Duncan's murder is a disruption of the order.
<h3>What do these words represent?</h3>
- The words show that something that shouldn't have happened has happened.
- The words show system violation done forcefully and negatively
- The words show how something disharmonious is being established.
In "Macbeth" we find that Duncan was a good king, with few enemies and much admired, in addition to having good health. This shows that Duncan's death was not something that should have happened and if it did, it should be from natural causes and not precociously through murder.
This murder caused Duncan to lose his life at the wrong time, making the environment disharmonious and corrupted as a "breach in nature."
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So that the group can look for strengths and weaknesses in the ideas
Answer:
D. I see three new students on the roster: Brown, Brian; Jones, Janis; and Monroe, Max.
Explanation:
In this situation, due to commas using two functions may lead to confusion, a semicolon is used as a more powerful comma.
A does not use this, so <em>it could be misread easily</em>.
B puts the semicolon where only a comma could suffice, so <em>it separates the entity "Brown, Brian" and turns it into "Brown" "Brian, Jones"</em>.
C works correctly <em>until the oxford comma, which throws up the entity grouping</em>.
D is the only one that perfectly groups the three entities.