C.) The lightening lit up my bedroom like a lamp. The speaker/author is describing the lightening as a bright strike, causing the room to be lit up. He is using a simile to describe how it is LIKE a lamp, not actually one.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
Harriet Tubman was a famous ex-slave and abolitionist. She is well known for her work in the underground railroad which was a group of safe houses that helped slaves escape from the south and seek refuge in the north.
A book about famous abolitionists would be the most useful as A would be biased, B has nothing to do with the topic, and D has nothing to do with the topic.
The answer is between A and D. However, I think the answer for this may be A.
When hearing toward that it’s basically defined us towards our own way of our beauty and meaning of it
I assume that the verbal phrase underlined was "to arrive at the base camp"
It's an infinitive verbal phrase as it focuces on the indefinite form "to arrive"
It modified the word "eager", which is an adjective, and it gives more information about how eager, or what the reason for the eagerness was - this means it's an adverb phrase
So the answer is: infinitive; adverb