Answer:
Yes, I do agree. Because as humans we are quick to judge before we get to know someone. For example, people tend to think all white people are racist and all black people are dumb, but that is certainly not the case. Not all white people treat black people like slaves and not all black people didn't grow up in the hood living off the government. The saying, "Don't judge a book by it's cover," relates so much to this. Like Dr.Eberhardt said, our brains are hard wired for racial bias. Because humans aren't perfect, and yes sometimes we do judge a book by it's cover and yes we see it's true colors once we start reading.
Explanation:
The adverb clause in this sentence is 'before class starts', and it modifies 'meet', so A is the correct answer.
This sentence is messy, as well as a run-on. Here's a revised version:
"It becomes easy to gossip among the office, but remember; it is just as easy to keep it a secret!"
There is proper punctuation added to make it easier to read. It also adds personality and emotion to the sentence. Try reading the two aloud and compare them. You can make changes to it if you feel it necessary.
The answer would be the second option - love can overcome all obstacles. Nectar in a Sieve is a 1954 novel by Kamala Markandaya. The novel is set in India amid a time of serious urban advancement and is the account of the marriage between Rukmani, most youthful girl of a town headman, and Nathan, a sharecropper. The story is told in the principal individual by Rukmani, starting from her orchestrated marriage to Nathan at 12 years old to his demise numerous years after the fact.