Answer:
Dear brother,
I am writing to you to let you know that I have decided to go to university after I finish secondary school. I would like to study law, and I would be very grateful if you could help me to achieve this goal. I know that you are already a successful lawyer, and I would be very proud to follow in your footsteps. I am confident that I have the ability to succeed in this field, and I would be very grateful for your support. Thank you for always being there for me, and I hope to make you proud.
Sincerely,
[Your name]
<span>"So-called anonymous tracking is not very secure—the anonymity is fairly easily broken. Cracking [it]...is a fairly easy engineering feat."
This example maintains the main idea of the passage, keeping its message in tact while eliminating information using ellipses to improve clarity. The addition of "it" also helps make it clearer and more concise. </span>
Answer:
Trump won't leave the White House.
Explanation:
THEY look much better than the others - would be appropriate if you were referring to both a person and an object.
THOSE look much better than the others - would be appropriate if you were referring to an item not a person.
I am not sure but hope this helped.
Hey frnd
Ellipses are punctuation marks consisting of 3 dots.It saves space that's less relevant.
So I think it's option b.
Hope this helps u frnd