Your question is incomplete because you have not provided the underlined phrases, which are:
The biggest industry <u>of the Cook Islands</u> is tourism, which brings in more revenue than exporting fish and fruit.
The Cook Islands is a group <u>of 15 small volcanic islands</u>.
The Cook Islands stretch <u>over 800 miles</u>.
An airport <u>on Rarotonga</u> is a destination for tourists to the Cook Islands.
Answer:
The Cook Islands stretch <u>over 800 miles</u>.
Explanation:
Prepositional phrases begin with a preposition and have an object and, sometimes, modifiers. They can also act as adjectives when they modify nouns, and as adverbs when they modify verbs, by demonstrating how, when, where and why the action occurs. In this case, the underlined prepositional phrase functions as an adverbial phrase because it shows where or to what extent the Cook Islands stretch.
The rest of the options are incorrect because they modify nouns, so their object is related to the nouns they modify.
Don’t stay in a hidden area when you know that there are people that want to kill you. Next time...get the he** out of there.
Answer:
Invokes a common cultural allusion.
Explanation:
In Iron Maiden's song "The Evil that Man Do", the lyrics go as <em>"the evil that man do lives on and on"</em>. This is an allusion to the famous play "The Tragedy of Julius Caesar" by William Shakespeare.
In the play, Mark Antony comments on how a man's evil deeds continue to live on while the good deeds are not remembered after his death. Likewise, Iron Maiden's lyrics also state the same thing, that the evil deeds live on and on. This is an attempt by the heavy metal band to emphasize the point by invoking a common cultural allusion, taking the tragic play into their own song.
Thus, the correct answer is the first option.
It’s because we as humans find entertainment in other things, or perhaps in other situations we just don’t want to do the work because it’s tiring.