<em>'cause </em><em>you're</em><em> </em><em>way </em><em>too </em><em>better </em><em>✨</em>
Here are the answers to the given questions above.
1. Based on the given passage, what Roosevelt was warning against in these sentences is this: f<span>alsely accusing people of evil practices.
2. The line from the passage that has an admiring tone is this: </span><span>"He had no particular dislike to dirt, and did not think it necessary to remove several dark streaks on his face and hands."
3. The word or phrase that best completes the passage above is INSTEAD.
Hope this helps.</span>
Third person uses a point of view that only its the readers thoughts like the man in to build a fire all you read in his thoughts so how it affects the story is how you read .
Hey there
Being the bolded verb loved, it is conjugated in the in the preterite of the indicative mood.
The indicative is the mood of the real life; it makes a statement or asks a question, and the preterite is the time of actions that already happened. In this case, the verb is showing something that happened in real life, real feelings and in the past.
Hope this helps
C. To explore the writer’s personal feelings