B.) As a stickler about statistics, I was disturbed by Mr. Schlosser's cavalier manipulation of data, which produced some startling — and, frankly, unbelievable — "facts."
While both have to very different meanings, both have a definition of meaning something small (alley - small passage, pony - small horse, pour, or amount of money). Both are 6 letters, but when made plural, are spelling differently (alleys - just add s, ponies - drop the y, add ies). Both are Latin in origin, changing letter to French. But alley is late middle English, with pony being from the mid 17th century.
Answer:
I would like both of them to be as friendly
Answer: It provides information and engages students with images and sounds.
Answer (c)
Explanation:
1.C
2.B
3.D
4.A
cant answer the fifth since we cant see the underlined phrase