Answer:
Doctors partcially formed the ACS, American Cancer Society
I think the answer is the first one, the workshop was not a pleasant environment for the children
I think this because in the excerpt it’s talking about how normally they don’t have a big breakfast, she wasn’t talking in her normal nasty voice, they would’ve be chained to their looms etc so it’s basically saying normally this place is a dark and not an enjoyable place for them but that day was for some reason was different. But you can infer that it wasn’t a pleasant environment for them by what goes on for them normally.
Answer: Influences the price of exports and imports
Explanation:
The value of the exchange rate of a nation's currency can impact how much the country imports or exports which will affect its balance of trade.
For instance, if a country's currency becomes stronger, it would make its exports more expensive (as these are quoted in the domestic currency) which would lead to less of its exports being sold. At the same time however, imports will become cheaper to the people of this country since their currency is stronger. They will therefore import more.
The net effect is that exports decrease and imports increase thereby making the balance of trade worse off. This situation is reversed when the currency becomes weaker.
Answer: D) Rise
Explanation: I think the replacement should be "raise" so it will read "...the student was able to raise his test."
The total number of inflectional morphemes in the word "remarkably" is 1.
The inflectional morpheme is the prefix re-.
Inflectional morphemes don't change the grammatical category of the word, that is, it doesn't modify the type of the base word, which in this case is the infrequent adjective 'markable'. By adding the prefix re-, the word remains as an adjective.
The suffix -ly changes the base word 'markable' (or 'remarkable') from an adjective to an adverb; thus, the suffix -ly is a derivational morpheme. The suffix -ly can be counted as an inflectional morpheme only if and only if one considers adjectives and adverbs to share a grammatical category, which is a complex and by most linguists erroneous argument to make.