The word that best fills the gap is HIGHEST
Rental control l<span>imits the </span>amount<span> of rent that can be charged by a </span>property owner; it<span> acts as a price ceiling by preventing </span>rental<span>s from being charged above a certain </span>level<span> or from increasing at a rate higher than a set percentage.</span>
I stumbled across the DVD of A Passage to India while browsing through the selection at the University of Melbourne library back in 2010.
Before then, I didn't know anything about the book (other than being vaguely familiar with the title in a way we're vaguely familiar with a lot of classic titles.) I turned the DVD over and read the description on the back, and learned that the story was about the trial of an Indian man accused of sexually assaulting a white woman in the racially charged atmosphere of British Colonial India.
<span>It sounded to me like </span>To Kill a Mockingbird set in India.
<span>I usually dig political and historical films, so this sounded great. </span>
<span>I borrowed it from the library, and was tremendously disappointed by it.
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The adjective clause in this is the, "who was famished," part. Adjective clauses usually start with words like, "who", "whom", "whose", "that", etc. and includes an adjective. Famished is the adjective.
The media has the ability to influence public opinion of wars by putting out propaganda in support of one country and against another. This garners public support for one country and their actions while condemning the other. The information is often one sided and not relayed in a subjective manner, creating an unfair bias in the public eye.