Setting:
It a stories setting is changed it could make it a totally different story. If it is a horror story and you change the scene of a haunted house to a field of flowers then it inst really the same story anymore, is it?
B is the answer because without and it won’t be correct
Answer:
b. a collection of test scores from students taking state tests.
d. a set of stored information related to banking clients’ transactions.
Explanation:
A database management system (DBMS) can be defined as a collection of software applications that typically enables computer users to effectively and efficiently create, store, modify, retrieve, centralize and manage data or informations in a database. Thus, it allows computer users to efficiently retrieve and manage their data with an appropriate level of security.
Generally, a database management system (DBMS) acts as an intermediary between the physical data files stored on a computer system and any software application or program.
Hence, it is a software that enables the organization to centralize data, manage the data efficiently while providing authorized users a significant level of access to the stored data through the use of a server.
In conclusion, a database comprises of several data obtained from various sources or users. Some examples of databases in this scenario are;
I. A collection of test scores from students taking state tests.
II. A set of stored information related to banking clients’ transactions.
Subject is alligator and predicate is PREY
To Kill a Mockingbird is primarily a novel about growing up under extraordinary circumstances in the 1930s in the Southern United States. The story covers a span of three years, during which the main characters undergo significant changes. Scout Finch lives with her brother Jem and their father Atticus in the fictitious town of Maycomb, Alabama. Maycomb is a small, close-knit town, and every family has its social station depending on where they live, who their parents are, and how long their ancestors have lived in Maycomb.
A widower, Atticus raises his children by himself, with the help of kindly neighbors and a black housekeeper named Calpurnia. Scout and Jem almost instinctively understand the complexities and machinations of their neighborhood and town. The only neighbor who puzzles them is the mysterious Arthur Radley, nicknamed Boo, who never comes outside. When Dill, another neighbor's nephew, starts spending summers in Maycomb, the three children begin an obsessive — and sometimes perilous — quest to lure Boo outside