Answer:
The correct answer is <u>ENTRY C. </u>
Explanation:
"et"= and (since it is a complete word you don't need a full stop)
"al." = others (you must include the full stop because this is an abbreviation)
"et al." is a latin abbreviation that means "and others".
We use it when acknowlegding a text that has more than two authors. So, if there is less than two authors don't use it! Entry C has the correct punctuation, although options may vary depending on the referencing format that you are required to use as a guideline.
Entry A is incorrect. Because in the world of academic language we try to avoid "and others" when referencing.
Entry B is incorrect. Because "et" doesn't take a full stop since it is a complete word.
Entry D is incorrect. Because after the name of the author you should include a comma, unless you use "et al." for an in-text citation.
An aspiring young entrepreneur decided to start a foundation to help all the needy.
This is an example of a sentence using both the word aspiring as well as foundation.
Answer:
Answer is The speaker is the grass that is determined to grow over the earth.
Explanation:
The last two lines of the poem clearly say
<em>"I am the grass</em>
<em>Let me work".</em>
Here the subject of the sentence represents itself as "the grass" and it emphasises during the poem that it "covers all", which means that its work is to cover the earth.
In this poem, the speaker wants to remind people that even though it covers the battlefields makinf the dead bodies invisible, the memory always sticks with people. Except for making us feel for all the dead bodies and tragedies, this poem reminds us that horrors of war mustn't be forgotten.
The noun in this sentence which is uncountable, meaning that it names something that cannot be counted is the noun water.
You cannot count how many waters there are - it is uncountable. The other nouns, students and pitcher are countable, so they cannot be the correct answers, but rather water is.