Answer to Question 18:
I believe the answer is B: he never ate vegetables, but now he loves them.
Answer to Question 19:
I believe the answer is B: beautiful while also being unique.
Explanation to Question 18:
The <em>ate </em>in the sentence clarifies that he used to never eat vegetables, but now he does.
Explanation to Question 19:
<em>Unique </em>in the sentence is clarifying that the uniqueness of the home's furniture is positive, so it's not beautiful or unique; the furniture is beautiful and unique at the same time.
Using estimated resident population (ERP) projections based on the 2016 Census of Population and Housing, it is projected that in 2020 around 864,200 people will identify as Indigenous Australians. Whatever the size of the Indigenous population before European settlement, it declined dramatically under the impact of new diseases, repressive and often brutal treatment, dispossession, and social and cultural disruption and disintegration on the Indigenous Peoples of Australia.
Answer:
The adjectival phrases are:
*Wafting from the oven
*Melting in your mouth
*Warm and cozy
Explanation:
An adjectival phrase is a group of words that include an adjective but all together describe a noun or a subject as any other regular adjective, they are commonly used with verbs that finish in "ing" but that are not used as a noun but as an adjective within the complete phrase, "Wafting from the oven " describes the smells, "Melting in your mouth " describes the first bite and "Warm and cozy" describes a feeling.
The original name is from the Mohegan word "quinnitukqut" which means "at the long tidal river."
The name was transliterated sort of poorly (see: Nippon vs. Japan for another example... among thousands) by the English speaking folks of the time and it became Connecticut when spelled but the pronunciation was a little harder to fudge, it seems.
It has influenced the international law about human rights