For the answer to the question above, is your question just asking for an opinion? Well, this is my answer to that, I believe it is <span>Griswold. Nash only made one point and it was from his own opinion. Griswold had facts and stuck to them.
I hope my answer helped you</span>
Answer:
to aid in new growth I guess is the answer
Answer:
To show superiority and authority over Nora.
Explanation:
Nora, Torvald, and Krogstad are characters in the play "A Doll's House", by Henrik Ibsen. Torvald and Nora are husband and wife, and they a very sexist and abusive relationship. Torvald regards Nora as inferior, dependent, incapable. He sees himself as her lord and savior. To his mind, Nora must do everything to please him since, without him, she would be nothing. <u>When Nora begs him not to fire Krogstad - who is blackmailing her -, Torvald gets upset. He will not let a woman tell him what to do, even if she is asking, like Nora is, in a submissive manner, promising to entertain him. </u><u>He makes such a decisive show of mailing the letter firing Krogstad because he wants to make sure Nora knows her place. He wants to show his superiority and authority over his wife.</u>
In my opinion, the correct answer is B. <span>one adjective clause. This clause is "</span><span>which is perhaps the most famous border ever established by surveying methods". It modifies the subject ("The Mason-Dixon line"), providing an additional description for it.</span>
During their courtship and marriage, John Adams and Abigail Smith Adams exchanged over 1,100 letters, many filled with intellectual discussions on government and politics considered an invaluable account of the Revolutionary War. Abigail, a fierce advocate of rights for women and African-Americans, was an important partner throughout John's political career.