10 ÷ 5 = x
Think of it like this, if 5 lots of x fit into 10,
5x = 10
We divide both sides by 5 to get x
5/5 = x
10 ÷ 5 = x
Answer:
It'b
Explanation:
because it say their two pair of hands arrest me instantly so it sound like took into custody
The correct answer is C. Orwell provides a hypothetical situation with someone using unclear language.
Explanation:
The excerpt presented belongs to an essay titled "Politics and the English language" by the writer George Orwell, in this, the author explains in politics it is common to use vague language, euphemisms or similar tot defend actions and regimes that might seem indefensible such as the atom bombs in Japan or the British rule in India, for proving this, Orwell mainly provides a hypothetical example and situation in which a professor defends Russain totalitarianism by using unclear language and words that mask the brutality, for example, the professor would say "While freely conceding that the Soviet regime exhibits certain features which the humanitarian may be inclined to deplore" to describe the killings in this regime.
Answer:
"You are going near the post office?" Mrs. Reid asked her husband.
"Yes," he said. "Is there anything you want?"
"Could you get me a small registered envelope, please?" Mrs. Reid said, "I've got to send some money to my sister in Guyana."
"Ok," Mr. Reid said. "I'll get a Coulee. It may be useful to have a spare one available."
Explanation:
There are many ways that this paragraph could be punctuated. However, in my interpretation, I used commas to integrate my quotation marks, etc.
For example:
"Ok," Mr. Reid said. "I'll get a Coulee. It may be useful to have a spare one available."
I decided to add a period to the end of "said." However, you could choose to do it differently. For example, you could choose to write it like this:
"Ok," Mr. Reid said, "I'll get a Coulee. It may be useful to have a spare one available."
(Notice how I replaced the period with a comma? That simply means that "Ok and "I'll get a Coulee" is all one sentence versus two sentences. Both versions are grammatically correct. The writer simply needs to choose which one s/he wants.)