She enjoyed reading current events from her native town and country.
She is a Czech who migrated to America. She does not like to read anything in English. She just wanted to connect with her roots by reading the current events from her native town and country which was expressed through her native dialect.
I think the answer is "Having seen the Statue of Liberty, the Grand Canyon is more impressive." The Grand Canyon has not seen the Statue of Liberty; you have, but you- or "I" - are nowhere in the sentence. To correct the sentence, it would need to read something like this: Having seen the Statue of Liberty, I find the Grand Canyon more impressive.
You need to be more specific when asking questions like this. First of all, you should copy the second paragraph of whatever you are reading. After doing that, you will be able to get a suitable answer for your question.
<span>"So-called anonymous tracking is not very secure—the anonymity is fairly easily broken. Cracking [it]...is a fairly easy engineering feat."
This example maintains the main idea of the passage, keeping its message in tact while eliminating information using ellipses to improve clarity. The addition of "it" also helps make it clearer and more concise. </span>
The subordinate clause is the reason why something happens like. Zoe put on her coat Becuse it was cold.
Zoe put on her coat is the main clause and
Because it was cold is the clause