Answer:
<u>Step 1: Determine which options are correct
</u>
Which character in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar must decide whether or not to join the conspiracy to kill his friend Caesar?
- Option C: Brutus
The option that makes sense is Option C because Brutus is the person that is on the line of either staying loyal to Caesar or to join the conspiracy to kill Caeaser, the king of Rome.
<em>Look at attachment</em>
Answer:
The answer is correct.
Explanation:
For letter A, they were fooling us with the apostrophe. But, her's is not a real word as I remember from school. It wouldn't be C either because If you replaced it with hers, it would not sound right and wouldn't be proper grammar. Now I am not sure why you have to answers, for it is B. Hers and D. Correct. But reading from the instructions, it would be D. Correct.
Answer:
Because the factor behind the illness was caused by the greed and thoughtlessness of the traders.
Explanation:
In his narrative book, "The Life of Olaudah Equiano" Equiano tells of his life in slavery.
When Equiano was boarded on the ship, he saw the poor conditions of the ship. The traders on the slave ships were 'improvident avarice'; all they thought about was their profits. <u>The illness abroad the ships were caused due to small spaces, suffocating atmosphere, unbearable smell, and lack of food. The traders, to get more pay for slaves, would overload their ships with slaves in the small space, they were thoughtless about the living conditions of the salves and did not provide them food</u>. But for Equiano, the traders were harming their ability by keeping slaves in unhealthy conditions. Because of this unhealthy conditions on the ships, slaves either died of illness or took their own lives.
Infamy means being famous for something bad or negative. You may be hoping for fame when you get an enormous tattoo of your favorite pop star on your back, but there's a chance you'll end up with infamy instead.
The noun infamy is most often used to talk about famously evil or terrible people or historical events. The day the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, just before the start of World War II, was described by President Roosevelt as "a day that will live in infamy." Infamy contains the root word "fame," but rather than meaning "the opposite of famous," its meaning is something closer to "fame gone bad."