Answer:
C. an adverbial clause
Explanation:
An adverbial clause is a group of words that have at least a subject and a verb, and whose function is to act as an adverb, that is to say, to modify or to add more detail to an adjective, a verb or another adverb. This type of clauses often answers questions such as "Why?", "How?", "When?", "Where?" and "In what circumstances?".
So,<em> for there were stars out</em> <u>is an adverbial clause </u>because it gives further information or detail to the action (verb) of not knowing where the snow came from, and it also answers the question "Why": <em>Why don't you know where the snow came from?</em> Answer: <em>for there were stars out. </em>
None of the words are italiced, but based on context:
3. A pittance is a small amount.
4. To extinguish is to quench.
5. Disoriented means confused.
6. D. The speaker runs because, despite being an American citizen, his boss tells him to run and he was "on his time".
7. A. “Today, 2 percent of the Earth’s adult population owns more than 50 percent of its household wealth, and indigenous cultures are swallowed with the rapidity of a teenager gobbling a bag of potato chips.”
8. C. He uses the comparison to highlight the internal conflict he feels over his love-hate relationship with rap music, since both rap music and The Star-Spangled Banner speak postively of violence.
9. The roots of hip-hop go back to West Africa, but it was born in the streets of Harlem and the Bronx.
10. Gaunt means thin.
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