Answer:
Preposition: on Prepositional phrase: on both hands
Explanation:
On is a preposition and since verbs (dust, slip) can't be in prepositional phrase, the prepositional phrase goes no further than hands.
For 1 Part A, the answer is:
<span>persuade readers that babies are born without a tendency to show prejudice.
For Part B:
</span><span>We can put our faith in young people as a positive force.
For 2:
</span><span>The government should encourage teachers to promote tolerance.
For 3:
She appeals to the readers by convincing us that what she desires is possible simply by stating it:
</span>It is possible for all of us to work on this—at home, in our schools, at our jobs.
It is possible to work on human relationships in every area of our lives.
They've
Mightn't
Would've
Could've
Hope it helps
It's when you don't have any glucose in your bloodstream and your blood sugar is low. A way to prevent this, drink sugary drinks and eat a lot of protein. it's almost associated with diabetes, but the exact opposite. If you want to description from somebody who has this, you would be dizzy, you can't pay attention to anything, you're shaking too and everything you see is white until you fall on the floor and possibly have a seizure.
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