Segregation it is horrible but viewed as good back then
Answer:
1. P Throwing papers along the streets
2. DC While debris covered the park
3.P With the broken glass in the alley
4. P Beside old trucks and cars
5. IC No one lives there
6. P For lights on every corner
7. DC If the expense is too great
8. DC As he walked home
9. DC Dragged up the subway steps
10. IC Thousands of people walk every day
11. DC Racing against the traffic signal
12. DC Unless it rains
13. DC When a helicopter hovers overhead
14. DC Who plays basketball in the empty lot
15. DC That lives in town
Explanation:
Fati is an old woman.
<em>>>The adjective in this sentence is </em><em>old </em><em>because it's describing the old woman.</em>
<em>Mrs. Adom gave me a pencil. </em>
<em>>>The adjective in this sentence is I think the pencil because it is describing the fact that </em><em>Mrs. Adom gave me a pencil.</em>
<em>** I am not sure about this one**</em>
<em>Mrs Adjei gave birth to two beautiful sets of twins.</em>
<em>>> </em><em>The adjective in this sentence is Mrs. Adjei giving birth. </em>
Answer:
A. when sending an invitation
Explanation:
The correct answer is A. when sending an invitation; when sending an invitation, it would be a personal letter because personal information can be embedded in the letter.
The other options B, C, D are formal letter. You wouldn't send anything personal when providing information about services OR when answering ad for a job OR when asking a company for information.
Answer:
The Loisels are upset about losing the necklace because:
A. The necklace belongs to someone else and they feel obligated to
replace it.
Explanation:
This question is about the short story "The Necklace" by Guy de Maupassant. Mathilde Loisel, the main character, is a woman of elegant tastes but little money. <u>She borrows a fancy diamond necklace from a friend of hers to attend a party with her husband. On the way back home, she somehow loses the necklace. Since her husband does not earn a lot, and since they feel obligated to replace the lost necklace, they end up borrowing money.</u> It takes the Loisels ten years to pay their debt off. Ironically, that is when Madame Loisel finds out the lost necklace was actually a fake one, worth much less than the real one she and her husband bought to replace it.