The answer would be letter D: A sense of accomplishment mixed with a feeling of regret.
While growing up people live their life based on different decisions made through it. People take risks and drove their life the way they want but at the same time there are lots of risks people don't take. That is a resume of how life goes. Based on this, in the older years people start to realize all they accomplished through life, where they are standing and how much effort that took, but at the same time, with all of these accomplishment older people tend to think "What if", based in all the decisions or risks they never took. This brings in them a mixed sense of regret of things they never did and accomplishment of those they did.
1. Both the written and the unwritten laws keep the community and the society together. The written ones that are laws and the unwritten ones that are customs and traditions. To see if the written laws have been broken is what the courts need to establish, and not the unwritten ones.
2. Atticus then claims that no written laws were broken by neither Mayella nor Tom Robinson when they kissed. Mayella, in fact, is the one who broke the unwritten laws and codes and customs of Maycomb when she decided and kissed Tom Robinson. She kissed a black person, and that was her transgression according to society.
3. Because she kissed a black person she felt guilty. Her father would not have such "shame" befall their family and Atticus clearly states that it was her father who has beaten her because she broke the "code". Because of her guilt she decides to hide the fact that she wanted to and did kiss Tom she accused him of r.ape.
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it. The appositive can be a short or long combination of words. Look at these appositive<span> examples, all of which rename insect: The insect, a cockroach, is crawling across the kitchen table.
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An adjective phrase is a group of words that describe a noun or pronoun in a sentence. The adjective phrase<span> can be placed before, or after, the noun or pronoun in the sentence.
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In linguistics, an adverbial phrase<span> is a group of two or more words operating adverbially, meaning that their syntactic function is to modify a verb, an adjective, or an </span>adverb<span>. </span>Adverbial phrases<span> ("AdvP" in syntactic trees) are </span>phrases<span> that do the work of an </span>adverb<span> in a sentence.</span><span>
I think it is an appositive phrase, but it has been a long time since I've done this.
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