I had to look for the missing passage and the options and here is the answer:"Here is New York" is a book that was written by E. B. White and Roger Angell. And based on the passage taken from this book, the effect that the symbol has on the meaning on this passage is this: The commuter is the queerest bird of all. The suburb he inhabits has no essential vitality of its own and is a mere roost where he comes at day’s end to go to sleep. (This answer is based on the actual options attached to this question).
Answer:
1)Maintaining eye contact or talking to them
2) Junior never brings himself to say that Mary’s decision to leave for Montana was rushed and reckless where his decision to study in Reardan was steady and responsible. In Mary’s messages to Junior—her email and letter—Mary’s unflagging optimism masks the growing difficulty and despair of her jobless new life in a trailer far from home. Mary’s early death shows how bad the despair of life on Indian reservations can be even for extremely talented and intelligent people.
Hope this helps:)
<span>Because it is someone telling you his or her story.</span>
Even though technically all of these answers are correct, I still have to pick one as the incorrect answer. So, my answer is C. an adverb can be a noun.
A and B are definitely correct - adverbs are indeed words that describe verbs and tell us more about them (he runs <u>fast</u>). D is also correct as the word really is an adverb that modifies the adjective handsome. So we are only left with C as the correct answer.
Britain<span> will be remembered based on their actions in this great war, was the main message.</span>