Verbs found in the sentence:
“went” - irregular
“liked” - regular
I’m sorry, but I can’t answer the question if you didn’t add the passage. Please, add the passage next time. <3
This culture sounds like an early 1900's, mid 1800's culture. Back then, people respected the elders in their communities, oftentimes going over for a chat or a cup of tea. The saying "respect thy elders" comes from that era.
If you are talking about a certain culture, like an African, American, European, etc., it would probably be an Asian culture. Asian children are taught at an early age to respect and mind all elders, including their older siblings.
If you are talking about religion...every religion tells the kids to respect their elders!
Listen, we can't help without context. I have no clue what this is
Answer: D. to provide
Divest means to get rid of.
A. to take away (take away and get rid of are the same thing.)
B. to control (has nothing to do with control, isn't the opposite of to get rid of)
C. to devise (to plan isn't the opposite to get rid of)
<span>D. to provide (to provide is the opposite of to get rid off)</span>
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Answer: D. to provide</span>