Answer:
C) There is a bay in Puerto Rico that seems to light up at night; the light comes from tiny organisms in the water.
Explanation:
A semi-colon usually stands in for a period when two sentences are related. In the sentence, "There is a bay in Puerto Rico that seems to light up at night; the light comes from tiny organisms in the water," you can replace the semi-colon with a period and it would still make sense. They relate to each other as well. So this sentence is punctuated correctly.
(Further explanation for those who really need it):
A doesn't make sense because the semi-colon isn't needed. It'd need a comma in place of the semi-colon.
B doesn't make sense because the semi-colon isn't needed, either. It'd need a comma in place of the semi-colon.
C is correct. It is explained above.
D could possibly use a semi-colon, but it's placed in the wrong spot. It'd probably be placed between "world" and "people." But it sounds a little janky to me, so I think it doesn't need a semi-colon at all. "World" should have a period after it and the "p" in "people" needs to be capitalized. Either way, it isn't punctuated correctly.
The mockingbird mimes the tongues (glott) of many (poly) other birds.
The correct option is this: I LOVE DISCUSSING BOOKS WITH WHOEVER LIKES TO READ MYSTERIES AND SCIENCE FICTION.
An adjective is a part of speech that describes, quantifies or identify a noun or pronoun. An adjective gives more information about a noun. In the correct option given above, the adjective 'whoever' describes the kind of person that the speaker likes to discuss books with.