Answer:
"slowly and cautiously"
Explanation:
This phrase helps describe the verb "climbed" within this sentence.
You answer would be d because she is the speakee
Answer:
A. Perhaps names will be forgotten, but the sacrifice for freedom will always be appreciated.
Explanation:
Option A is the concept that both speeches have in common.
In Martin Luther Jr's speech, he revealed that it is those that were willing to suffer for righteousness' sake that are to be remembered by men and women of the land. The righteousness' sake he refers to here is "the sacrifice for freedom" many of them made.
Abraham Lincoln's speech shares the same thought with Martin Luther King Jr's speech. In Abraham Lincoln's speech, he reveals that the dead can only be remembered not be forgotten because of what they have done.
What entirely are you asking ? this question seems incomplete .
Answer:
Its - car
This - More and more physicians are beginning to look not just for illnesses but also for patients' habits with long-term health implications
Its - cow
Someone - no antecedent
It - antecedent not clear
Explanation:
The antecedent of a pronoun is the word or phrase whose place the pronoun takes. In some cases, the antecedent is obvious, while in others it's either missing or not clear.
In the first and third sentences, it's simple. In the first sentence, a car's transmission is mentioned. Instead of repeating the word <em>car</em>, we will use the pronoun<em> it</em> and its possessive form <em>its</em><em>.</em> It's the same in the third sentence (cow's tail - its tail).
The second example is interesting because the antecedent of the pronoun <em>this</em> is the entire previous sentence.
In the fourth sentence, the antecedent is missing. We don't know instead of what word the pronoun <em>someone</em> is used.
In the fifth, the antecedent is not clear as the pronoun <em>it </em>could be used to refer to the word <em>rain</em>, or the word <em>mud</em>.