A weather (state of atmosphere) front is a boundary separating two masses of air of different ... Weather maps<span> are </span>created<span> by plotting or tracing the values of relevant quantities ... </span>Cold fronts<span> come in association with a </span>low-pressure area<span>. ... When moisture pools </span>along<span> the boundary during the warm season, it can be the focus ..</span>
Answer:
B. Replace repetitive words with pronouns.
Explanation:
When revising repetitive writing, you can replace repetitive words with synonyms, combine sentences with repeated words, and/or delete sentences with similar ideas. You can do this because these help the writing to flow smoother and more efficiently.
On the other hand, replacing repetitive words with pronouns is what you should not do. Read the example that follows:
<em>"I love cats. I love cats so much I want to own a cat one day."</em>
You can see how it is repetitive, right? Now if you replaced the repeating words with pronouns...
<em>"I love cats. I love them so much I want to own them one day."</em>
It does not fix the problem, right?
On the other hand, if you combined the sentences and replace the worlds with synonyms:
<em>"I love cats, so much so that I want to own one someday."</em>
It fixes the issue, correct?
Hope this helps!
Panna
Born a Crime is merely about Trevor Noah’s childhood and adolescence years with some reflections on the culture and history of South Africa. The book includes information about his life including his mother’s.
Trevor’s mother, whose name is Patricia Noah, is born into a Black South African family belonging to the Xhosa tribe. Patricia grows up feeling neglected who is a middle child of a working class single mother. Her parents divorce and her father goes to live with his second wife and new family. She later on is sent to her paternal aunt in a rural area. Patricia is able to get a good education and her traits seem ambitious. She wanted a better life for herself. She begins working as a secretary and becomes frustrated with her family members taking mostly all her money. She moved into an apartment by herself. While there she meets Robert who is a white man that she becomes friends with. Patricia persuades Robert to father her child because she wants to establish a family for herself. She later gives birth to a boy named Trevor who is a mixed-race, light-skinned child. And at that time it was very illegal for people to have intimacy with individuals from different racial classifications, and Trevor was clear evidence of her criminal activity.
Trevor is a rambunctious child who his mother disciplined strictly. Patricia encourages her son to be an independent and curious thinker who thinks critically, thinks for himself, and asks as many questions as he wants. She gave him encouraging and ambitious aspirations.
Patricia meets a mechanic named Abel, who later date and end up getting married. Trevor doesn’t trust his new step-father.
His mother gives birth to Trevor’s half-brother Andrew. Abel doesn’t like Trevor because he spends too much time with his father Robert, so he rarely seems him. Robert later moves away when Trevor is thirteen years old.
Abel later tries to create his own car repair shop which makes him have serious economic problems, and Patricia lends him some help. Due to Abel’s alcoholic issues he becomes to physically abuse Patricia, their pets, and Trevor. Patricia legally divorces Abel but continues to live with him, supporting her income while he continues to drink more heavily. To tie up loose ends; Patricia ends up becoming pregnant again and gives birth to Trevor’s second half-brother named Issac, and leaves Abel for good and remarries. Trevor gets a call because Abel ends up shooting Patricia, she sustained minor injuries. Abel avoids jail time and had only served parole. And Trevor reconnects with his dad, Robert.
Answer:
He is tired of Squeaky dominating the race.
Explanation:
When we first read the excerpt, we know that Mr. Pearson is clumsy- the excerpt explicitly states this with the line "with his clumsy self". This eliminates the first option. As we contine through the passage, we get hints that Mr. Pearson is not Squeaky's biggest fan. With the line "shaking his head sadly like it’s my fault all of New York didn’t turn out in sneakers", we see that Mr. Pearson is upset that there is not a lot of competition. Instead of being happy that there is less competition for Squeaky, like he would have been if he was rooting for her, he seems disappointed. I hope this helps!
I think the answer would be C