<span>The common realm of Tragedy and Comedy, therefore, is the ethical world ... difference lies in the different relation of the leading characters to this ethical world.</span><span>
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It would be whom, you can tell to use "who" if you can substitute it with "he" or "she". And you can tell to use "whom" if you can substitute it with "him" or "her". In this one, "whom works better because if I say "did you ask her to help us" or "did you ask she to help us" (I had to rearrange the sentence a bit to make it work) the one with "her" works better.
Links to related information is the correct answer because the internet allows for the use of URLs or "links" that lead directly to information and not just a normal reference.
Answer:
Both conventional public beliefs and existing academic research on colorism presuppose that variation in skin color predicts social outcomes among minorities but is inconsequential among whites. The authors draw on social psychological research on stereotyping to suggest that in quick, low information decisions such as an arrest, the opposite may be true. Contrary to findings for longer term socioeconomic outcomes, the authors find that black men’s probability of arrest remains constant across the spectrum of skin color, while white men’s probability of arrest decreases continuously with lighter skin. Beyond posing an exception to the modern conception of colorism, these results have implications for efforts to ameliorate the epidemic of incarceration among black men, as well as for understanding how elements of visible phenotype may serve as a unique category of predictors in models of social inequality.
Explanation:
ur aren't showing a picture but the answer is in the top..
Answer:
noun
Explanation:
bird is a naming word
and the pronoun for a bird is 'it'.