D. "Neither my friends nor my family cares about me," said Finlay.
In this sentence there are two subjects, "friends" and "family". Since the conjunction "neither...nor" is used, the subject-verb agreement gets a little tricky. If both subjects were singular, as in he or she, the verb must agree with a singular subject. This is because it is either one or the other not both. In this sentence, one subject is plural, friends, and one subject is singular, family. Family is considered a collective noun, so even though there are many people in the family, there is only one family. Since family is closest to the verb and it is singular, "to care" must be in the singular form. Option B and C are wrong because the verbs "were" and "are" are plural verbs.
Answer:
when Lady Macbeth first enters the scene, what is she saying and doing? ... S3 When Macbeth tells the doctor to cure her, how does the doctor respond? ... what does Macbeth say about the possibility of the army attempting to besiege the castle? ... Because Macduff bring up his mom and him being a baby and she died.
I think is C because in the text it's the main idea.
Play around with the words. Poems don't always have to rhyme however, you could start by 'I met a guy at GRA', and continue from there.
If you are referring to Patrick Henry, he claimed that if he had held his opinions back, he would be committing treason against the country and would betray God, whom he valued more than any other Earthly King.