The sentences that indicate that it is an ex nihilo type of creation story are the following sentences:
<em>" There was as yet no man, nor any animal, nor bird, nor fish, nor crawfish, nor any pit, nor ravine, nor green herb, nor any tree; nothing was but the firmament. The face of the earth had not yet appeared—only the peaceful sea and all the space of heaven. There was nothing yet joined together, nothing that clung to anything else; nothing that balanced itself, that made the least rustling, that made a sound in the heaven. There was nothing that stood up; "</em>
Explanation:
This creation story in the passage called "ex nihilo earth diver world parents emergence", it can be summarized as the creation made out nothing. It is known that the creation story is a religious, cultural and traditional issue or story in which it is also known as cosmogony that is related to the origins of our world.
<span>One of the effective attitude is being ‘responsible’ where the person owns his
statements by saying ‘I’ in all the things he would say, instead of ‘we’.
Example, ‘We don’t like the way you act a while ago.’ Change it to ‘I don’t
like the way you act awhile ago’. Here, you are establishing ownership on the
things you want to say to the person.</span>
"Are you sure you left it on the table?" asked Roberto. is the only correctly punctuated sentence here.
the first sentence requires a COMMA inside the quotations, rather than a period. "Judy said" is attached to the quote, because the quote is judy's words. you keep them together, rather than making them two separate sentences.
the third sentence is missing a comma as well. "oh no," sarah said... is the correct way to write it, with a comma after "no."
the fourth sentence is wrong for several reasons. your end punctuation goes inside your parentheses, and this sentence put the exclamation point after. "She laughed" additionally requires a period to end the sentence, stating that she laughed, then offering her dialogue. alternatively, you could place a comma after "laughed" and accept that for the verb leading into the quote.
It could be the first or the third answer but i am not sure you probably have to look up the words to find what it could be