I would Say none of these are colloquialisms, I looked up what colloquialisms are, unless these words specifically are in sayings, none of them are <span>colloquialisms</span>
<u> D. Men are only human and fallible themselves and cannot claim their opinions to be divine and infallible.</u>
The excerpt asserts rulers' nature (both civilian and ecclesiastical): they are fallible, imperfect, and uninspired men. Still, over the centuries, they have established and imposed their opinions on others as reliable, as the only truth. But this is wrong, the divine, and the truth can not depend on men's opinions or beliefs about what they think it's right. In conclusion, men with their fallible and imperfect nature, cannot claim their opinions to be divine and infallible.
Cause and effect, compare and contrast, order-sequence and problem-soultion
Answer:
social grants
The govement give a variety of social grants to its citizens. Recently, millions have benefited from social grants given due to the economic crisis caused by the current Pandemic.
nutrition
The government issues nutrition guidelines, or contributes to the nutrition of families with programs like food stamps.
School fees
The government makes elementary and secondary education virtually free in public schools, and contributes in tertiary education as well, with public universities, scholarships, low-interest credit, and so on.
health care
The government provides free healthcare to the poor, the disabled, and the old. It also excercises some control over prescription drugs prices, and maintains networks of public hospitals and other healthcare facilities.
housing
The government provides public housing in some areas. It also offers low-interest mortgages backed with public money, and influences the private mortgage markets through monetary and fiscal policy.
Explanation:
From the beginning of the story, wind and mist are representative of the uncanny and the unknown on Mars. When he first disembarks onto the planet, Harry Bittering is immediately struck by the wind sweeping across the plains, reflecting that “the wind blew as if to flake away their identities
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