Answer:
A). That of European languages, in both grammar and vocabulary, have.
Explanation:
As per the question, option A displays the correct form of the underlined phrase as it follows the grammatical rules and parallelism that comprehends the meaning of the sentence. The other options either contain parallelism error like in options B, D, and E (as the singular verb 'has' follows the plural noun 'striking differences') or grammatical error like in option C that wrongly employs 'those'. Thus, first option best suits the passage(grammatically) and comprehends the meaning of the passage. Thus, <u>option A</u> is the correct answer.
Answer:
Esperanza manages to convince her mother to let her eat lunch at school by repeatedly nagging at her for a few days until she gives in. Initially her mother argues that it would create extra work for her, as she would have to make the lunches the night before, and this is something she doesn't want to do.
Explanation:
Does this help if so your welcome and can you give brainiest?
Answer:
Explanation:
It's been so long. Since I last have seen my son. Lost to this monster. To the man behind the slaughter. Since you've been gone. Since I last have seen my son lost to this monster. To the man behind the slaughter. Sinceyou've been gone.
Abrupt end because of knee problems?
Unclear question, but I infer you are referring to a passage that isn't mentioned.
Answer:
e. Personification
Explanation:
Based on the context which referred to abstract objects; time and care, the author seems to be personifying 'Time'.
Note that Personification is a type of figure of speech that attributes or refers to something that is not a person as though it were.
One common example is "Have you seen my car? Isn't she beautiful?". We noticed the car is spoken as though it were a person.