Answer:
 B: quote in a newspaper
 Explanation:
An ellipsis is a series of three quotes which shows that parts of a speech or text was intentionally omitted by the writer. When quoting a person in a newspaper article, it is possible that the person said a lot of things but for the purpose of brevity and striking the main point, ellipsis can be used to omit unnecessary words.
Example:
"A genuine leader is... a molder of consensus".
Martin Luther King
The full quote is :
 "A genuine leader is not a searcher for consensus but a molder of consensus."
 
        
             
        
        
        
Science is the study of the natural world based through experiments and observation. Pseudoscience on the other hand is a system of theories, assumptions, and methods that are regarded as scientific. They both present information but Science is based on facts while Pseudoscience does not adhere to any scientific method. 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Explanation:
Hamilton, although he had expressed substantially the same view in The Federalist regarding the power of reception, adopted a very different conception of it in defense of Washington’s proclamation. Writing under the pseudonym, “Pacificus,” he said: “The right of the executive to receive ambassadors and other public ministers, may serve to illustrate the relative duties of the executive and legislative departments. This right includes that of judging, in the case of a revolution of government in a foreign country, whether the new rulers are competent organs of the national will, and ought to be recognized, or not; which, where a treaty antecedently exists between the United States and such nation, involves the power of continuing or suspending its operation. For until the new government is acknowledged, the treaties between the nations, so far at least as regards public rights, are of course suspended. This power of determining virtually upon the operation of national treaties, as a consequence of the power to receive public ministers, is an important instance of the right of the executive, to decide upon the obligations of the country with regard to foreign nations. To apply it to the case of France, if there had been a treaty of alliance, offensive and defensive, between the United States and that country, the unqualified acknowledgment of the new government would have put the United States in a condition to become as an associate in the war with France, and would have laid the legislature under an obligation, if required, and there was otherwise no valid excuse, of exercising its power of declaring war. This serves as an example of the right of the executive, in certain cases, to determine the condition of the nation, though it may, in its consequences, affect the exercise of the power of the legislature to declare war. Nevertheless, the executive cannot thereby control the exercise of that power. The legislature is still free to perform its duties, according to its own sense of them; though the executive, in the exercise of its constitutional powers, may establish an antecedent state of things, which ought to weigh in the legislative decision. The division of the executive power in the Constitution, creates a concurrent authority in the cases to which it relates.
 
        
             
        
        
        
I’m pretty sure it’s hubris!
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
The answer is B
Explanation:
transitional expression can be useful for making a text or a speech flow well, with clear connections between ideas. However, inexperienced writers will often use these phrases too often, peppering them in every sentence or multiple times in a single sentence, which can actually have the opposite effect: confusing readers or obscuring the point, rather than clarifying the point.