Answer:
The best answer is indeed letter D. Many American men were drafted during World War II, and many other men volunteered to serve.
Explanation:
When combining independent sentences, we must take a few things into consideration. Proper punctuation and conjunction must be chosen. Also, parallelism - the repetition of a certain grammatical form - is important for the sentence to sound more fluid.
The first two options present problems with parallelism since the two main verbs are used in different ways - were drafted X volunteering. The third option corrects that problem since volunteering becomes volunteered - now there is parallelism since both clauses are in the simple past. But the conjunction "or" conveys an idea that one of two possibilities can be realized. The best conjunction in this case would be "and", since it conveys a sense of addition - both things happened, men were drafted, and men volunteered. Therefore, the best option is letter D. Many American men were drafted during World War II, and many other men volunteered to serve.
I believe the correct answer is B. the use of dialect in speech.
A is incorrect as heroic characters have existed for a very long time (just remember Beowulf); C is incorrect as tragedy was invented back in ancient Greece, which was a looong time before the realist era; D is incorrect because the use of imaginary settings is a characteristic of the romantic era, which preceded the realist era. This leaves us with B, which is evident if you take a look at Huckleberry Finn, for example, which is a good example of Realism.
Anger at being treated like she is invisible
Answer:
a) She <em>goes</em> to school everyday.
b) The earth <em>moves</em> around the Sun.
c) We <em>learn</em> English now.
d) Good students always <em>work</em> hard.
e) Games <em>keep</em> our body alert.
f) I <em>study</em> English for five years.
g) Asmita already <em>answers</em> this question.
h) Januka <em>did not answer</em> this question yet.
i) They <em>live</em> in the city for 10 years.
j) Whenever he needs money, he <em>comes</em> to me.