Answer:
I think
2. Who
3.that
4. Who
5.who
6. Which
7.which
8. That
Explanation:
10:which/that
11: who
Sorry I don’t know the 9th question.
The tone of "In Another Country" is sanguine, or hopeful. The speaker of the story feels rather optimistic, despite all the pain and suffering around him. Even during the war, the speaker notices the electric lights that come on along the streets in winter as well as the snow on the foxes’ fur as the wind blows their tails. He also remarks that the hospital, a place filled with pain and injured people, is old and beautiful. When the speaker sees the major’s hand, he thinks it looks like a baby’s hand. These appreciative reflections during a war suggest that the speaker is hopeful. The speaker’s tone, then, lets readers see the war in a less gruesome light.
<span>Darrow uses charged language, such as “crazy” and “barbarous” and “ashamed” to persuade the judge and audience to reject the death penalty in spite of the horrible crime Leopold and Loeb committed.
These types of words would hang in the audience's minds and appeal to their emotions. Using this type of language would make the audience think and hopefully persuade them to reject the death penalty. </span>
Answer:
1) intransitive verb
2) regular verbs
3) future passive
4) verb tense
5) linking verb
6) verb mood
7) past participle
Explanation:
not %100 sure but good luck :)