Answer:
Vowels misbehavin’: Reduction
Some Russian letters change their behavior depending on whether they’re in a stressed or an unstressed syllable. The vowels a, o, ye, and ya do this a lot. When stressed, they behave normally and are pronounced in the usual way, but when they’re in an unstressed position, they go through a process called reduction. This deviation in the vowels’ behavior is a very important linguistic phenomenon that deserves your special attention. Not knowing it is like a double-edged sword: not only does it take other people longer to understand you (they simply won’t recognize the words you’re saying), but you also may find it hard to recognize the words you think you already know (but unfortunately store in your own memory with the wrong stress).
Explanation:
Link:
https://www.dummies.com/languages/russian/sounding-like-a-real-russian-with-proper-pronunciation/
I hope this helps^^
sorry if I'm wrong
I think it c because it is almost always right like I'm positive like an electron (=/)
Answer:
The word <em>him</em> is a pronoun.
Explanation:
Pronouns can be words like <em>I, me, he, she, him, her, it, they, them, herself, himself, you, who, </em>and other similar words.
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Labor is purchased with wages and salaries
The suffix is paid. Hope this helped!