Answer:
The two adverbs in the sentence are "later" and "today".
Explanation:
An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Adverbs can convey several meanings in connection, for instance, with time, place, manner, intensity, etc.
The adverbs "later" and "today" are both adverbs of time in the sentence we are analyzing here. They both answer the question "when". When will the new lawyer present his case? Later. More specifically, later today. Other examples of adverbs of time are: tomorrow, yesterday, now, then, soon, etc.
Answer:
No
Explanation:
In many jurisdictions there is legal no difference between committing a robbery while armed with a deadly weapon and committing a robbery while (falsely) claiming to be so armed. But I would most definitely argue that even here armed robbery is worse. A real weapon poses a greater risk of death or injury than an imaginary weapon.
Answer: number 4
Explanation: quotation marks shows when a person is talking (duh)
Number one wouldn’t make sense, because it put half of the person who is talking in the quotation marks
Number two doesn’t make sense because the quotation marks is after “will go”, which is part of the dialogue
Number three seems incorrect because “today’s students” isn’t in quotation marks
Number four should be the answer, because dean watkins is saying “today’s students”, and “will go through an average of four career changes in their life spam”