Most words tend to do that depending on how you use them and where they are located
I believe the correct answer is - with strong wording encouraging readers to take action.
I don't think his style is balanced - he starts slowly, but then introduces very strong and opposing ideas about the topic. There are no expert opinions here - he just mentions research, but doesn't actually name it. He doesn't cite examples. We don't know if his reasoning is fallacious - it could be true, or it may not be.
However, he does use strong words and urges the readers to do something about this problem.
“their” and “she” are the pronouns because they are taking place of a noun (meaning a name).
extending for understanding:
so for “she” it’s taking place of a woman’s name. the sentence could also be, for example, “sally told me the house had red shutters and a blue door.” “she” is holding the place of the name sally.
and for “their” it’s holding the place of name of a group of people. this sentence could be, for example, “that’s not the smith’s house at the end of the street.” “their” is holding the place of the smith’s.
Answer:
White - holy and graceful
Answer:
Writers in the first half of the 20th century were heavily influenced by world war
1. Americans were also heavily influenced by the great depression and the disillusionment of capitalism. This is why many wrote about poor characters and rags to riches stories, like the Great Gatsby, or they were about people going to Europe like Hemingway often wrote.
Explanation: