It conveys admiration.
The author uses the words champion, winning, remarkable achievements, and extraordinary. They all have very strong connotations of success and positivity. This immediate eliminates option A. Option B is also not correct because they do not show curiosity. We also don't see true excitement. If the author wanted to convey a sense of excitement in the paragraph there should also be exclamation points. These words convey admiration for the person Thurgood Marshall was and his achievements.
The answer to your question would be that the sentence that contains a verb tense shift error is the following one: Kristoff worked hard on his diet, but he could not resisted snacking. That is, the answer would be B.
A verb tense shift refers to the change from one verb tense to another within a sentence or paragraph. In this case, the verb "resisted" should be in the bare infinitive form as it is preceded by the modal "could". That modal is already related to the past tense used in the first part of the sentence.
Answer:
sorry but i dont think anyones going to be able to read that
Explanation:
Answer:
play never ever have I
Explanation:
put chairs in a circle for everyone but one person the person in the middle says never ever have I then says something they have never done such as fly in an airplane. Everyone who has flown gets up and changes chairs with someone else whoever is left without a chair is the new person in the middle.