Answer:
Explanation:
So u want us to right u a paragraph?
A dog found on the street is called a stray
Answer:the second one
Explanation:
This reasoning is a fallacy of relevance: it fails to address the proposition in question by misrepresenting the opposing position. For example: Quoting an opponent's words out of context—i.e., choosing quotations that misrepresent the opponent's intentions (see fallacy of quoting out of context).
this is what it is and now all you have to do is figure out which it is
Answer:
are
Explanation:
When using "who", we might use are <em>or </em>is. It depends on the rest of the sentence.
"Who are we?"
"Who is ready to go?"
Both are correct.
- who are "we" {we is plural}
- who is... {asking about a specific individual's status}
Even though the rest of the sentence agrees with the singular "is" as opposed to "are"; You could say "Those are the candidates who are worthy of my vote".
For the first part of the sentence, you're specifically talking about a singular subject [not plural], Nora.
Because Nora "is" one of...
For the second part, you're talking about a group of candidates [plural] so following "who" should be "are".
Nora is one of the candidates who are worthy of my vote.
{You can almost always separate a sentence like this. }