Answer:
3. wind, sunshine
4. You (implied subject)
5. ly (delicately)
Explanation:
3. The antecedent is what <em>their</em> refers to, and the wind and sunshine are spreading warmth around the garden.
4. In an imperative sentence you are giving a command, so the sentence addresses "you" even though English speakers like to omit the subject.
5. Adverbs generally end in <em>ly</em>.
I narrowed it down some so its easier. You have 2 answer choices to choose from. (Process of elimination)
1. |B| She tells Marty that he brought joy and kindness to the dog. OR |C| She makes him a special supper with his favorite foods.
2. |B| He knows the deer would be to afraid of Judd's dogs to go inti the garden. OR |D| He sees the deer grazing before Judd shoots it.
3. |A| He knows Judd isn't honest and that he will try to say Marty was the one who killed the deer. OR |D|He's worried that the game warden will want to arrest him too.
4. |C| Feed his dogs. OR |D| Pick beans.
5. |D| He realizes that Judd Travers is a good person and that he misjudged him.
{Gave You That One As A Freebee}
Food is the object of the transitive verb "hunted".
Answer:
The sense of flow comes from her word choice by using a complex chemical break down relating to cleaning, the old fashion style of drying clothes, the house/residency was near or by surrounding fields, this allows me to picture and visualizes how her living is with the pass along and seemingly strong tradition.
I visualize the author is describing her childhood in the location of dutch fields. Watching maybe a parent doing cleaning or up keeping due to the mention of cleaning products and old style of drying clothes possibly from the clothespins. The family passes many traditions down and only does it their way, showing a possibility of a strong family culture or lifestyle with hints of religous manners with the phrase of "10 verses that I can say myself" connecting it to knowledge of Christianity/Catholicism.
I'm sorry if this isn't the best answer but here's at least a baseline you could go off of. I hope this helps in one way or another!
Answer:
They play football. (into negative)
= they don't play football