Answer:The story 'A Quilt of a Country' is a commentary that is written by Anna Quindlen. This was written by her after the terror attack on America. She compared the broken pieces of America as a metaphor. She quoted that America is a special country from many other countries.
Answer:
The correct answer is: <em>The speaker thinks that the colonists are being unfairly treated by the British government</em>
Explanation:
The depiction of the colonists through the hyperbole "slaves and minions" portrays the disagreement of the colonists towards the British government's imperialist policies, and the suffering and cruelty that they would have to endure if they continued to subjugate themselves to the British Crown.
A dependent clause cannot stand on its own. A clause means that it has a finite verb, meaning that there are no infinitives and participles/gerunds only, but a finite verb.
Having that in mind, the dependent clause here would be D. who works at that desk, which means that the rest of the sentence - <em>The woman is absent today </em>is independent.
Answer and Explanation:
Santosh Yadav and Maria Sharopova are two women pioneers in two different sports, but who have played an important role in their countries, in addition to inspiring girls around the world.
Santosh Yadav was an Indian climber and mountaineer, she was the first woman to climb Mount Everest, one of the most difficult and impossible to climb. She was so successful in climbing Mount Everest that she did it twice.
Maria Sharapova was a Russian tennis player, the first in her country to be chosen as the best tennis player in the world in 2005. She is one of the most successful and awarded athletes in the country, in addition to being a UN goodwill ambassador.
Answer:A demonstration is action by a mass group or collection of groups of people in favor of a political or other cause or people partaking in a protest against a cause of concern; it often consists of walking in a mass march formation and either beginning with or meeting at a designated endpoint, or rally, to hear speakers.
Explanation: