<span>The past perfect tense for this statement should be: “My sister looked
at many dresses before she had chosen the one.” Note that this type of tense
speaks of an action that was accomplished in the past before another event
came. It is formed with the past tense of “to have” plus verb’s past
participle.</span>
Answer:
A
Explanation:
None of the answers specifically mentions race, but A mentions welcoming people so I'm 95% sure that's the answer
C. Middle-class salesman buys his family a home after 20 years of hard work
Answer:
the past perfect form of the verb to elect is
B. had elected.
Answer:
Affect/Effect Affect is usually a verb: Chester’s humming affected Posey’s ability to concentrate. Effect is usually a noun: Chester was sorry for the effect his humming had. If you find yourself stumped about which one to use in a sentence, try substituting the word “alter” or “result.” If “alter” fits (Chester’s humming altered Posey’s ability to concentrate), use affect. If “result” fits (Chester was sorry for the result his humming had), use effect.
Their/There/They’re Their is the possessive form of “they”: Chester and Posey took their time. There indicates a place: It took them an hour to get there. They’re is a contraction of “they are”: Are Chester and Posey coming? They’re almost here.
Farther/Further Farther refers to physical distance: Posey can run farther than Chester. Further refers to metaphorical distance: Chester is further away from finishing his project than Posey is.
Explanation: hope this helps