Answer: “Behind the mountains are more mountains.” It expresses the idea that life is filled with obstacles, or problems, some that you can see in front of you, and some that are beyond those you can see.
Explanation:
<em>One strategy the U.S. government widely employed to assimilate American Indians after their forced relocation was enrolling native children in boarding schools.</em>
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<em>Furthermore, they also taught native children English and encouraged them to shad their cultural identities.</em>
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<em>American Indians or Indigenous Americans constituted the indigenous peoples of the United States, except Hawaii. There are over 500 federally recognized tribes within the US, about half of which are associated with Indian reservations.</em>
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Answer:
The bell was a dummy and not even working.
Explanation:
The short story "The Adventure of the Speckled Band" is one of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes series. The story revolves, as usual, around the mysterious case of murder which Sherlock Holmes and Watson tries to solve.
While examining the room where Ju lia Stoner was killed mysteriously, Holmes and Watson noticed that there was a bell attached along the walls which seems normal, as people use it to summon for anything. But the weird part about this particular bell was that it was<em> "a dummy"</em>, and <em>"it is not even attached to a wire.[. . .] it is fastened to a hook just above where the little opening for the ventilator is."</em> This means that the bell was just a means for something else other than summoning the housekeeper.
The past perfect refers to a time earlier than before now. It is used to make it clear that one event happened before another in the past. It does not matter which event is mentioned first - the tense makes it clear which one happened first.
The kind of phrase the underlined words in the sentence is: A. <span>adverb phrase. As the name suggests, an adverb phrase functions the same way the adverb does. It modifies a adjective, verb, and adverb. In the sentence above, the phrase provides more details on the adjective "thousands". </span>