The correct answer is letter <span>A. dedicated. </span><span>The question talks about the Unit 7 of Lesson 12
Unit Checkpoint: Life Stories, Part 1. It describes the scientists as </span>dedicated. Scientists are mostly dedicated to the things that they are doing because whatever the output of their experiments are later be used.
I think this will work:
There was only the churned water, filled with scantlings and torn branches of trees. ... It will send up the price of scantlings, and we was getting on too fast with them. About all the timber required to erect one of these houses is for joists, scantlings, and doors.
No light can escape from it. If the way we see things and colors is the light being absorbed and reflected, we cannot see a black hole if no light can be reflected. The only way scientists can tell if a black hole is present is the impact of it to the surrounding stars and gas.
Answer:
<u>past; third-person</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
Yes, the excerpt from The Conjure-Man Dies is written in the<u> past tense</u>, from a <u>third-person</u> point of view.
In the English language, a tense refers to an indicator telling when an action occurs, while the past tense refers to an action that has happened before. The <u>third-person</u> point of view refers to a story told from the perspective of another person (the third party). It often using words like 'he, she, they.'