Answer:
She has skills that show her intelligence.
Explanation:
I'd consider this a "book smarts" vs. "street smarts" scenario, pretty literally with the idea of not knowing what subway to take. Nothing in the passage shows she isn't confident in her abilities or has any sort of dependence on her daughter, and it states very clearly many things she is able to do.
<span>The ungrammatical example is I is hungry, which is the third option here. This is ungrammatical because the conjugation of the verb to be is incorrect - I always goes with am, not is, which is used for third person singular only, and I is first person singular. The second example is the only completely acceptable one. The first and fourth examples aren't ungrammatical, but they are colloquial and should not be used in written form.</span>
Answer:1. they'll flock in droves
2. I'm a made man forever
Explanation:
I could not find the excerpt that is missing in your question but I have found the possible answers to it.
- ''The £1,000,000 Bank-Note" is published in 1893. year and it is a short story located in Victorian London written by Mark Twain.
- Hyperbole is a rhetorical device that can be used in poetry and oratory where it can create strong feelings and impressions. The main key that is representing a hyperbole in these two sentences is '' droves'' and ''forever''.
The meaning of hyperbole is not taken literally in many texts because of its meaning that often sounds bigger and better than it actually is.