<span> A scaly, legless reptile species</span>
<u>Answer:</u>
Option E. One quality of a good research question is that it provides specific details of the context.
<u>Explanation:</u>
It is very important that the person who is required to answer the question understands it well otherwise the answer will not help the researcher. For example, if the researcher is researching ‘teenagers’, the question needs to specify what aspect is being referred to. Is it their behaviour with peers, with teachers or with parents or is it their attitude towards particular things?
For instance, a research question can be framed as :
What is the attitude of teenagers towards their peers in school? Unless the question is detailed well, the answer will not meet the expectations of the researcher.
Answer:
The correct answer is A. either, or; neither, nor
Explanation:
Correlative conjunctions are a type of conjunctions or words that link two or more words, clauses or sentence and always include two conjunction or parts. This means this type of conjunction differ from coordinate and subjunctive conjunction because they work in pairs to join different elements and one conjunction depends on the other, this includes pairs such as both/and; neither/nor; either/or and not only/ but also. This implies in the case of the sentence "Either John or Lisa was in the lab, because neither Neil nor I went there today" there are two correlative conjunctions and these are "either/or" and "neither/nor" that link different element in this sentence and are pair or correlative conjunctions.
Capulet thinks Juliet is too young to elope (get married), but cannot refuse Paris. To get more time he asks Count Paris to Court his daughter. It is his way of showing that he knows what is best for Juliet.
Answer:
Innocent would be the antonym of guilty
Explanation:
Innocent is defined as "not responsible for or directly involved in an event yet suffering its consequences" or "a pure, guileless, or naive person." Which is the exact opposite of guilty which is defined as "justly chargeable with a particular fault or error."