Like Romeo and Juliet...sadly :/
Answer:
C
Explanation:
A is a run-on.
B is clunky, and while it works it's not the best.
D is missing an action between "and" and "how", making the senence inconsistent.
Listen I would answer this for you, but there are programs that <em>all</em> English teachers <em>always</em> use to make sure you didn't just steal someone else's work. If somebody writes this paragraph for you and you take it for yourself that's called <u><em>Plagiarism</em></u>. And I don't want you to get into trouble for that since it <em>is </em>something very serious.
It would mostly depend on what Nobel Peace Prize you won. But on a general scale, here's an idea or outline on how your speech should be.
<span>I. Introduction
(in here you talk about the prize itself, why you won it and give your thanks on receiving it)
II. The prize
(in here you talk about any fact of the prize)
A. Fact #1
B. Fact #2
III. what brought you to winning it / why you won it/ how you got there
A. personal story (events/ some memory/ etc)
B. role models (inspiration)
IV. thanks
A. feed off role models, parents, people whom inspired you (giving them the credits and whatnot)
V. Conclusion
(restate basic idea in introduction, restate thesis, summarize what you wrote)
</span>
Hope that helped!
Answer:
The quote shows that even through heartbreak and pain you can still pull through and live your life to the fullest. It also shows that painful situaltions can eventually lead to happiness and happy situations.
Explanation: