"insubordination in shirking his duties precipitated discipline comes Spitz"
Huh..a lot of big words. Well, I know that "insubordination" means someone lower then the person at the top is disobeying said order. So, e.g a frycook at McDonalds refuses to make his boss a Big Mac. "Shirking" means to avoid or get out of doing something, normally. So "shirking his duties" sounds like as if he got out of doing his work or he avoided doing something he's supposed to do. And "precipitated discipline" sounds like Spitz, the character in this sentence seems to mean that he decided to own up to himself and started to build up discipline, becoming an inversion of himself. I hope this helped!
-Trumpular :)
To make people more interested in what happens after Goliath get hit
hello, i have just taken the test. your answer for part A would be ''the bird would rather fly free'' and for part B it would be ''for he must fly back to his perch and cling''. hope this isnt too late :^
Can you show me what it's asking and the answers you were given
D. add -s ............................