Answer:
This is the part when he is on horseback, about to warn the town that the British are coming. In the first line, he starts heading toward the village streets with "the fate of a nation" counted on him to do so. This because he is about to warn everyone so that they can be prepared to fight. This is shown through the lines "the spark struck out by that steed", meaning that the villagers are counting on his warning to change history by sparking the Revolution.
<span>Question 7
Macbeth is one of Shakespeare’s Great Tragedies.
True: Because of the amount of death and sadness and murder through the play, Macbeth is considered a tragedy. It's also one of Shakespeare's most famous and most popular.
Question 8
Macbeth is a story about: The murder of a king by his cousin, the revenge of a son, three witches who plot against Macbeth, and Macbeth’s rise/fall.
False: Macbeth kills the king, but is not related to him and witches do not actively plot against Macbeth. It's just about the rise and fall of Macbeth.
Question 9
Shakespeare demonstrated the Elizabethan belief that the country is stable only if the king is good and virtuous.
True: As soon as Macbeth, a bad and evil king, takes control of the country, people report weird and spooky things happening, and the country falls to chaos.
Question 10
Macbeth is Shakespeare’s shortest tragedy.
True
True
False</span>
The use of Correlative Conjunction gives us the answer
"C. neither Carl nor Peter".
Correlative conjunctions are employed in sentences to indicate the connection between two words or phrases. "Typically, correlative conjunctions are used in pairs."
Use of correlative conjunctions improves writing flow, cuts down on repetition, and clarifies the relationship between related words or phrases inside a sentence.
When two sentences with singular subject are joined by correlative conjunction then the Verb used will be Singular.
Some other pairs of correlative conjunction are:
"either or", "neither nor", "both and", "whether or", "not only", "but also", "rather than", "such that" "no sooner than" "such that".
To learn more about Correlative Conjunction here.
brainly.com/question/25713213
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Yes it’s easier to keep track of notes that way