Hi. Although you submitted a text, you did not submit any questions regarding it. This prevents me from giving you any answers. However, to help you out, I'll explain what the text presented means. Hope it's useful.
The text posed in the question above is an excerpt from "Of Plymouth Plantation" written by William Bradford, where he presents a real account of the life of the first English settlers, recently arrived in America. In this excerpt, he shows how the arrival in America was very challenging for all the settlers. They had already faced problems on the way between England and America and when they arrived in the new world, they landed in a place where there was no one to help them with anything. The settlers had neither house nor food, they had to face the harsh winter without any resources to protect them, they did not know any place they could shelter and lived in constant concern about being attacked by the "savages", that is, the natives.
Answer:
It's 1803 it's cold and dark. My family is struggling to get food and water. I am the women of the house so I have to work on the house cook for my family and farm to stay alive sometimes i even have to help hunt.
Explanation:
This is as much as i will help you with surely u can come up with more.
It is a complex sentence because wherever means the first clause is a subordinate clause (it is a clause because there is a subject and verb) and the second clause, "that place is my home", is a main clause. A complex sentence has 1 main clause and 1 subordinate clause.
Answer:
D. The tone in the text seems inspirational, but in the audio version, Churchill sounds unemotional.
Explanation:
It is a beuatiful text, and if you read it you can see great words and beautiful writting, but once you hear it, Winston Churchill had a strange tone of voice and was too old at that time that he didn´t actually adressed it the proper way, he has no tone, nor varies his speaking, it´s just a flat speech. That´s why there´s a notable difference between the audio and the text of the speech.