Colons are not used to introduce lists.
Colons denote "that is to say" or
"here's what I mean."
They make sentences’ first parts not important
rather the sentence’s second part contains the important information.
Here are
some of the rules you could use for colons:
*Colons are uses upon introducing items.
*Do not use capital letters after a colon except if
it’s a proper noun.
*Do not use colons after a verb or preposition.
*For independent clauses, especially when the second
sentence explains the paragraph’s meaning, the use of colon is preferred.
*After a colon: capitalize the first letter of the
first word if it is a complete quotation.
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C. The cases of asthma per 10,000 residents are increasing significantly among poor children who live in areas such as the inner city of Chicago.
The question is asking for the best claim restatement. When restating the claim, it is important to clearly state the claim without adding additional elements. The claim should not be restated with the same wording so some detail can be added to clarify but not change the claim. Option A adds the element of the government fixing the problem. This changes the claim so it doesn't work. Option B also changes the claim when it lists the contributors to air pollution. Option D is wrong for the same reasons. Option C is correct because it restates the claim in a different way and the additional detail only clarifies, it doesn't change the claim.
Answer:
it shows how concrete poetry developed over time
Answer:
1.A
2. believe it is c
3.c
4. probaly b for i did not read the whole thing
a suffix can change the meaning of the root word