In my opinion, the correct answer is C. <span>John Smith suggests that "people make the most errors misusing the order of operations" ("Solving Equations").
When citing an online source, the author is not obliged to include the URL of the source in an in-text citation. If he would choose not to include the name of the author in the sentence, the parenthetical citation would require the surname before the title (Smith, "Solving Equations"). Of course, on the Works Cited page, the author would have to provide the full name, the title of the article, the website's name, publication date, as well as the full URL (without the http(s):// prefix).</span>
The jingo was fervently waving multiple national flags at the independence day parade.
No, because as you said it "does NOT contain fact-based details" therefore it is not reliable. If something doesn't contain fact-based details, it isn't reliable.
Answer:
Why is it that some people seem to be able to read a book once and remember every detail of it for life, while others struggle to recall even the title a few days after putting down a book?
The answer is simple but not easy.
It’s not what they read. It’s how they read. Good reading habits not only help you read more but help you read better.
Explanation:
pah answer ng question koo please lang at pa follow nadin ako