Answer:
B) Boaz admires Ruth’s courage in coming to a land that is foreign to her.
C) Boaz respects Ruth’s character due to the sacrifices she has made to be loyal to Naomi.
Explanation:
Ruth was the daughter-in-law of a woman named Naomi whose sons had died leaving her with the two widowed wives, Ruth and Orpah. Naomi's husband Elimelek had also died so she decided to return back to her hometown of Bethlehem. But she also gave permission to the two widows to return to their own families and stay happy with them.
While Orpah left, Ruth sticks with her mother-in-law and went to Bethlehem. There, she did work, obeying whatever Naomi told her or asked her to go, collecting the leftover harvests in people's fields. In one such field, the owner Boaz came to know about her. It is after much observation that he spoke to her these given words in the passage from <u>chapter 2:11</u>. This passage reveals the <u>admiration that Boaz has for Ruth, her courage in coming to a foreign land away from her own family. It also reveals the respect that Boaz has for Ruth's character for the sacrifices she has made by being loyal to her mother-in-law Naomi.</u>
A. The huge white van full of holiday packages for everyone came down the street, is the correct way to rewrite the following fragment.
As compared with other sentences, this sentence makes the appropriate use of preposition 'down' followed by the noun, which clarifies the sentence precisely.
In the other sentences B. The huge white van full of holiday packages for everyone rumbling and backfiring. C. The huge white van full of holiday packages for everyone on our whole block. D. The huge white van full of holiday packages for everyone in time for Christmas; does not frame the proper sentences as it joins the sentences abruptly without any direction specification.
Hard to judge without the context of the other sentences of the story but if I had to guess, it sounds "inviting and familiar" to me.
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