<span>False. The mother is indifferent to the independence of Biafran. The father is the one who gets very opinionated about the independence of Biafran. The mother does not seem to have an opinion and instead states that there are more important things to worry about.</span>
Answer:
There are many ways to go about this. The common tense rule is this: The tenses of verbs in a sentence must be consistent when the actions happen at the same time. When dealing with actions that occur at different points in time, however, we can – and probably should – use multiple tenses in the same sentence.
Hope this helps!!
~gloriouspurpose~
The answer is B, "the government is complicated." In the other examples, the subjects and verbs dont match grammatically. For example, in A, the word "forest" should be plural to use the very "are".
British may b or may be not