In this question, we cannot provide evidence from "assigned materials," as you did not tell us what materials these are. However, we are still able to discuss the rest of the question:
We are required to compare historical themes, concepts or patterns with current critical social justice issues. These three statements compare such themes:
- The historical abolitionist movement fought for the right of Black people to have freedom, in the same way as white people did. They relied on the idea that both races are equal, and this is still the motivating force behind movements such as "Black Lives Matter."
- The feminist movement has faced many battles in the past, including that of achieving women's suffrage. The feminist movement nowadays continues to fight, particularly in the area of sexual abuse and harassment.
- The "green" movement of the present that wants to prepare for the threat of climate change is similar in many ways to the Native American movements of the past that focused on protecting the environment.
Answer:
Regular and Irregular Verbs in English
Regular VerbsMost verbs are regular verbs. Regular verbs are those whose past tense and past participles are formed by adding a -d or an -ed to the end of the verb.
Regular verbs list:
arrange – arranged – arranged
arrive – arrived – arrived
ask – asked – asked
attack – attacked – attacked
bake – baked – baked
behave – behaved – behaved
believe – believed – believed
belong – belonged – belonged
blame – blamed – blamed
borrow – borrowed – borrowed
bother – bothered – bothered
call – called – called
cancel – canceled – canceled
roll – rolled – rolled
Irregular Verbs
There is no formula to predict how an irregular verb will form its past-tense and past-participle forms. There are over 250 irregular verbs in English. Although they do not follow a formula, there are some fairly common irregular forms.
For examples
be – was/ were – been
bear – bore – born (e)
beat – beat – beaten
become – became – become
burst – burst – burst
buy – bought – bought
catch – caught – caught
choose – chose – chosen
cling – clung – clung
come – came – come
cost – cost – cost
creep – crept – crept
Explanation:
The first person the answer of he said is the answer
D would be best for his argument. At present, he has a lot of statements, but no sources. While his premises are well grounded and logical, we're still having to take his word for it. Having citations lends credibility to his work.