I might be wrong but I would say A because when you are revising it’s a good time to fix things and add things in
Coordinating conjunctions.
Letter B. Subject > [What Scripture tells us] should be the basis for our behavior. <u>The brackets show better the Subject</u>. The Subject is the naming part of a sentence. It shows who or what performs the action. In grammar, the two main parts of a sentence are the Subject and the Predicate. In this case, the Subject is compound of several words.
<em>The Subject is commonly a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase.</em>
Answer:
Because I searched this question up on Google, the only answer i can come up with is "Crude and mimetic" I really hope this helps!
A simile is a metaphor that straightforwardly analyzes two things. This is a type of illustration that unequivocally utilize interfacing words, (for example, like, as, so, than,), however these particular words are not generally necessary. So in here, the answer is A, since it does not compare two things and there is no words like like, as, so, or than.