What she means is that she had made 19 trips to Maryland, helped 300 people to freedom, yet she was never captured and didn’t fail to deliver her "passengers" to safety. As Tubman herself said, "On my Underground Railroad I [never] run my train off [the] track [and] I never [lost] a passenger." During these journeys she helped rescue people that were from her own family and people who weren’t from her own family. You can check her story in the America Library.
(1) The planes have to undergo rigorous safety checks. (2) You may have to undergo disappointment and failure before experiencing success. (3) It took me some time to undergo the metamorphosis from teacher to lecturer. (4) Most patients undergo some sort of drug therapy for leukaemia
Answer to Question 18:
I believe the answer is B: he never ate vegetables, but now he loves them.
Answer to Question 19:
I believe the answer is B: beautiful while also being unique.
Explanation to Question 18:
The <em>ate </em>in the sentence clarifies that he used to never eat vegetables, but now he does.
Explanation to Question 19:
<em>Unique </em>in the sentence is clarifying that the uniqueness of the home's furniture is positive, so it's not beautiful or unique; the furniture is beautiful and unique at the same time.
Answer: No, I think deception is never necessary. I think that deception is just a trick to always get whatever you want, which is very wrong and selfish. The only time deception may be acceptable to me is when you are in a very important argument where you or a friend could be in harms way. A possible example of this is when you, or a friend is getting in trouble for something you did not do. Do everything you can, including deception, to get out of that situation.
Explanation: