Answer:
William and Mary were invited to take the throne, causing Parliament to control the succession to the throne.
Explanation:
The "Glorious Revolution" happened in<em> 1688.</em> The event replaced "James II and VII" as a ruler of three countries. These countries were <em>Scotland, England and Ireland.</em>
His daughter, Mary II replaced him together with his nephew, William III (the sovereign prince of Orange). Mary II married his cousin, William III. <u>Since James II and VII abdicated his throne (because he was in exile), he offered the throne to his daughter and nephew.</u>
This revolution was considered "glorious" because no blood was shed and it was peaceful. Remember though that Mary II was different from Mary I. Mary I burned the Protestants, that's why she was called "Bloody Mary."
The correct revision is..
"You're being dramatic," said Eliza.
"I don't think it's dramatic to say that you're going to fail the humanities class if you don't pass its final exam," replied her mother.
You're is short for you are. It's is short for it is. You use its for possession.
Answer:
the first is simile
second is personification
Explanation:
SIMILE -a figure of speech involving the comparison of one thing with another thing of a different kind, used to make a description more emphatic or vivid (e.g., as brave as a lion, crazy like a fox ).
PERSONIFICATION- the attribution of a personal nature or human characteristics to something nonhuman, or the representation of an abstract quality in human form.
HOPE I HELPED
PLS MARK BRAINLIEST
DESPERATELY TRYING TO LEVEL UP
✌ -ZYLYNN JADE ARDENNE
JUST A RANDOM GIRL WANTING TO HELP PEOPLE!
PEACE!
Answer:
Names are important because they show a distinction of what something is/what something could be. If you were looking for a book but instead of the word book being book, you could say “Oh hey that’s your book” but then the person recieving that sentence would be confused, basically asking yourself “what is a book?” Oddly, names are important whether it’s a person’s name or an item’s name.