Answer:
B
Explanation:
Let's not make it complicated. The original text used stuff about, making it less informal and casual. Although the question is looking for a more concrete phrase, A and D doesn't look like a better way to write it.
Maybe consider C but it's highly likely its B.
A.
Samuel Longhorne Clemens, known by his pen name Mark Twain, fits this description.
I'm going to use x as the missing/unknown number here. You know that the answer is, at most, 30. You also know that a product of something means multiplication. So, something times five is, at most, 30.
This would be written as: 5x<span>≤30, as the answer is equal to 30, or less than that.
If you'd like to solve for x, you divide both sides by 5:
x</span><span>≤6
The sign does NOT flip, the number that was divided to get x alone was not a negative, so no sign-flipping is needed.</span>
That sentence is an example of parallel structure.
When there is repetition of a specific grammatical form in a sentence, parallelism or a parallel structure is produced. This occurs when you mantain the same pattern for every compared word or idea in your construction. This makes the idea easier to follow by the reader.
I fit in with other people, but I can not talk. I create pictures, but I can not see. What am I?
Answer:
A puzzle piece.
(Dont worry i can help you)