Answer:
C and D
Explanation:
You're asking for the definition, right?
Choice A is not a definition.
Choice B and C is an example of the word "petulant" so not the answer either.
Short Answer: A
A really super writer could get away with putting the thesis statement in the conclusion of a paragraph piece. But present day English Departments have become very rigid about where the thesis is.
It is always in the introduction. The idea is that you have to guide your reader to the arguments that follow in the paragraphs to come between the introduction and the conclusion.
My students are not only intelligent but also...
d- make me laugh.
Answer:
The answer is the first option "caminas".
Explanation:
When we conjugate the verb caminar (to walk) in the indicativo presente mood in Spanish, this is what we have:
yo camino
tú caminas
él/ella camina
nosotros caminamos
vosotros camináis
ellos/ellas caminan
Therefore, if the question wants us to conjugate it as "you walk" in English, we will have "tú caminas" in Spanish, since tú = you. Since the conjugation is enough to show to which person (first, second, or third; singular or plural) the verb refers, we may very well leave out the pronoun "tú", and say only "caminas".