<span>A compound sentence is a combination of two independent clauses that is being connected by a conjunction. A compound sentence is formed </span>"by joining two simple sentences with a comma and a coordinate conjunction".<span>Some of the coordinate conjunctions that are used to connect these two simple sentences are </span>and, but, so, or, for, nor, yet and many more. Below are some examples of compound sentences.
- I love icecream but, I hate it when it is melting already.
<span>- She goes to school everyday and, she participates in class too.</span>
Answer:
America has not changed
Explanation:
Hamilton's America displays how everlasting are the hot topics of today's America: immigration, state rights, debt, income inequality and racial relations. These were the same fights that defined Hamilton's time, and are the driving force of Miranda's historical work.
The role that narration plays in history is a central theme of Hamilton, Hamilton's musical and America. The musical invites the public to reflect: "Who lives, who dies, who tells his story?"
Your answer→<em> a category of artistic composition</em>
C) cannot be fair because he acts indifferent in the passage