Hello. This question was incomplete. The full question is:
Now let's look at the win-loss percentage between the 7–7 wrestlers and the 8–6 wrestlers the next time they meet, when neither one is on the bubble. In this case, there is no great pressure on the individual match. So you might expect the wrestlers who won their 7–7 matches in the previous tournament to do about as well as they had in earlier matches against these same opponents—that is, winning roughly 50 percent of the time. You certainly wouldn't expect them to uphold their 80 percent clip.
As it turns out, the data show that the 7-7 wrestlers win only 40 percent of the rematches. Eighty percent in one match and 40 percent in the next? How do you make sense of that?
Which type of evidence does the authors use in this excerpt to support the claim that some sumo wrestlers will intentionally lose a match?
Answer:
statistical
Explanation:
The authors use statistical data showing percentages and numbers that support and support the information given in the text above. These statistical data, in addition to confirming the arguments and statements presented, are credible to the article, as it shows that a survey was carried out and that there was accurate data collection, so that the statistics could be completed. In this way, the statistic presents very specific and accurate evidence for the text.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
What Is a Predicate Nominative?
A predicate nominative (also called a predicate noun) is a word or group of words that completes a linking verb and renames the subject. --- (grammar-monster.com)
the awnser is A. the speaker shares his feelings about a location...
Answer:
Question 1
Answer : All of the above
Question 2
Answer : All of the above
Question 3
Answer : All of the above
Question 4
Answer : passive voice
<span>Two-thirds of those interned in the US between 1942 and 1945 were Japanese citizens. This happened after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, which prompted the US to join the WWII. As a result of this, many Japanese people living in America were confined because of the actions of their mother country. Between 110,000 and 120,000 Japanese people were incarcerated in camps at the time.</span>