Frontier is defined as 1) a line separating two countries, 2) the extreme limit of settled land beyond which lies wilderness, or 3) <span>the extreme limit of understanding or achievement in a particular area.
Right away we can cross out B because the wilderness is pretty close to a frontier. We can also cross out D because it doesn't make sense with the definitions given. So now we are left with A and C.
A is a funny misuse of the word; they probably meant to say "front." So, now we only have C. C is correct, and it makes sense because space does have an </span>extreme limit of understanding in science.
Answer:
a
Explanation:
the demon is not the first energy
6m+6+1m2+5m-1
1m2+6m+5m+6-1
1m2+11m-5
You just have to combine like terms. Hope it helps.
The correct answer is the first option: The words each character says are enclosed by quotation marks.
Anything that a character says is always in quotation marks. This makes it much easier for readers to follow the characters' speech and understand the story.
For example: As Sarah closed her notebook, she accidentally gave herself a paper cut. "Ouch!" She exclaimed.
The word "Ouch" is enclosed in quotation marks which visually shows that the character spoke.
One of the only instances that a character's speech appears next to his/her name is in a play. Plays are often written with few actions and lots of speech. This is a format in which the character's words will appear next to his/her name.
Words that the main character says are also always in quotation marks, not italics or brackets. However, often times, words that a character thinks/says to himself may appear in italics.
Words that address a conflict are also never in bold or heavy black type. Conflict is written in the same format as the rest of the dialogue.