Answer:
the antonym of obscure would be
Explanation:
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please mark brainliest
Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:
I have trouble believing Mr. Sawicki's characterization of Steve, because he knows Steve only in school. Since Mr. Sawicki does not know Steve outside of school, he cannot make a judgment about what Steve has been doing in his neighborhood or who his friends are. Sawicki says Steve is honest, but even if Steve is good or honest in Mr. Sawicki's opinion, good people can still make mistakes.
What did you consider when you were writing your answer? Check all that apply.
what Mr. Sawicki says
. what other people say
. whether Steve is guilty or innocent
. what Steve has said
Answer:
what Mr. Sawicki says
Explanation:
The answer shown in the text above was created considering only what Mr. Sawicki says about Steve. The answer states that Steve's characterization through what Mr. Sawicki says is not reliable. That's because Mr. Sawicki doesn't know Steve fully and only knows his behavior in one place, at school. Mr. Sawicki does not know anything about Steve and does not even know how he behaves outside of school, so he cannot say that Steve is honest. In other words, Mr. Sawicki's speech is imprecise, it lacks evidence and therefore cannot be trusted.
Answer:
Explanation:
A and D both capitalize words incorrectly ("west" and "president" are regular nouns that do not require capitalization).
C seems to be proper, as the name of the author and the name of the book (not counting the word "in") is capitalized. However, the lack of punctuation is suspicious (since the book's name ought to be in quotes and italicized). In addition, it ought to read "she HAD loved" - I believe it's a grammatical error to omit it.
B Is properly capitalized, as the name/title of the queen and the first word of the sentence is capitalized.
I'd go with B. Let us know which answer ends up being the right one if it isn't B
The answer i believe is false <span />
While he was vacationing there with his wife and family. Because "While" is one of the subordinating conjunctions that come near the adverb clause.