Hi there! ʕ •ᴥ•ʔ
Answer:
I Disagree with this statement " Marriage is all about love and family."
Explanation:
<em>We need to have 3 things, other than love and family. We need</em>
- <em>good communication</em>
- <em> respect,</em>
- <em> trust.</em>
<em>Most people say love is a feeling I also disagree with that. Below I will explain my feelings on love. </em>
<em>I have always thought love was not all feelings and instinct but is instead a generosity of time. that if you truly love someone you will give them all your hours without a second thought. Ideal moments are exactly what they sound like ideal and hard not to enjoy. But love has never been about ideal moments for me, but rather everyday ones that are brightened because the other person is there.</em>
<em>Hope this Helps!</em>
<em>happy Valentine's day!</em>
ʕ •ᴥ•ʔ

<em> </em>
Answer:

Explanation:
This is a reasoning question where you have to find the pattern used in reference sentence and apply the same pattern in asked sentence.
The given reference sentence is,
<u>I WANT TO </u><u>BE</u><u> </u>which is written as O TNEW UT IB, in a certain code. If you would observe both the sentence then you can see all the given words are flipped.
for e.g. WANT is changed to TNEW
W was on the first position so it received last in certain code, T was on the last position so it received first position. This thing happened with the consonants that they were flipped without any change.
But there is a minor change was made with vowels they were shift to next vowels alphabetically.
The sequence of vowels alphabetically is
A,E,I,O,U if you would observe then every vowel is shifted like I to O, A to E in WANT to TNEW,O to U in TO to UT and E to I in BE to IB.
applying same pattern step-by-step in asked sentence,
Step 1- <em>Flip the sentence without changing any consonant,</em>
WOH YNAM SEMIT
Step 2- <em>Shift the vowel one digit</em> ( A→E, E→I, I→O,O→U)
WUH YNEM SIMOT

Answer:
its false. a romain archer would not put Sagittarius in a pharetra
raffic fatalities in alcohol-impaired-driving crashes decreased by 7.4 percent from 11,711 in 2008 to 10,839 in 2009. The alcohol-impaired-driving fatality rate per 100 million vehicle miles traveled (VMT) decreased to 0.36 in 2009 from 0.39 in 2008. An average of one alcohol-impaired-driving fatality occurred every 48 minutes in 2009.
Of the 10,839 people who died in alcohol-impaired-driving crashes in 2009, 7,281 (67%) were drivers with a BAC of .08 or higher. The remaining fatalities consisted of 2,891 (27%) motor vehicle occupants and 667 (6%) nonoccupants.
In 2009, a total of 1,314 children age 14 and younger were killed in motor vehicle traffic crashes. Of those 1,314 fatalities, 181 (14%) occurred in alcohol-impaired driving crashes. Out of those 181 deaths, 92 (51%) were occupants of a vehicle with a driver who had a BAC level of .08 or higher, and another 27 children (15%) were pedestrians or pedalcyclists struck by drivers with a BAC of .08 or higher.
The rate of alcohol impairment among drivers involved in fatal crashes in 2009 was four times higher at night than during the day (37% versus 9%). In 2009, 16 percent of all drivers involved in fatal crashes during the week were alcohol-impaired, compared to 31 percent on weekends.