It really depends on the situation, the kind of relationship, and the person. are you happy in your relationship? or do you feel like being with this person is exhausting you? if someone came up to you and gave you a chance to leave, would you feel relief to be leaving the person? so yeah, it just depends on how much you want to be with them
Answer:
The money must have been invested for 6 years
Explanation:
To calculate the number of years for which the money had been invested, we simply make use of the simple interest formula
Mathematically;
I = PRT/100
according to the question, I is the interest earned= $1275, P is the amount invested = $4,250, R is the interest rate = 5% while T is the time we want to calculate
We can rewrite the simple interest formula to mean;
T = 100I/PR
T = (100 * 1275)/((4250 * 5) = 127500/21,250 = 6 years
Answer:
Claim 2 has to be eliminated
The young rock (mountain) becomes old.
Explanation:
All the mountains of the world are either young (high mountains such as the Himalaya) or old (low mountains such as the Pyrenees mountains). The latter is a low mountain range because time has had its erosive effect.
There is no such thing as minerals going from one rock or mountain to the other because there is only one. And it´s young or (becomes) old.
Answer:
The list of words and phrases that would be most useful when drafting a comparative literature essay is:
B. while, both, only one, however
Explanation:
If the essay is comparative, we will need words that help establish that comparison. That is why list B is the best option. Take a look at the examples below:
- While A is like this, B is like that.
- Both novels have the same theme.
- Only A develops the character deeply; however, B describes their physical appearance.
See how we used the words from list B in the sentences above. Each sentence is comparing two different things or literary works.
List A would be more effective in a chronologically structured essay. List C would be better for a cause-and-effect essay.
Answer:
Hi there~
Your answer is true.
Merrily is the adverb of merry.
(You have to change the 'y' to an 'i'.
Hope this helps
Sky