Answer: one you don't repeat , you learn an grow from it, but also feelings from it.
Explanation:
Sorry it sound confusing but here it is
Answer:
Nick stops his action because as he observes Gatsby from the distance he notices it is a private moment for Gatsby as he trembles when observing a green light through the water close to Daisy's house, therefore he does not feel comfortable to interrupt the moment for his neighbor.
Explanation:
At the end of <em>The Great Gatsby</em> the famous novel written by the North-American author F. Scott Fitzgerald, it is possible to see how Nick has a real interest to present himself to the famous, mysterious and millionaire Gatsby, however he notices there is something really personal happening through his mind at that moment. Nick can see from the distance how Gatsby is in a deep thinking moment as he stretches his arms towards the water with his trembling body, which looks like an intimate moment, a moment after Gatsby simply disappears and Nick finds himself alone again.
Answer:
Explanation:
Donizetti's Gemma di Vergy, as well as many other belcanto operas of the first half of the 19th century, is infrequently produced today, mostly on account of requiring singers with a virtuosic vocal ability in all of the roles.
A.on account of requiring singers
B.on account of their requiring a singer
C.because it requires singers
D.because of it requiring singers
E.being that it requires a singer
The use of "on account of" with a gerund ("requiring") is wordy and unidiomatic.Option C conveys the meaning in the simplest form and hence is the correct option. All other options are awkwardly wordy.
This is due to contrast in language. Describing a simple and everyday object such an umbrella is not supposed to need formal or logic language and that is, precisely, the comic effect of the comparison.
The answer D. Trustworthy because a credible source cannot be biased, useless or persuasive if doing research foe an essay.