Answer:
Up into the neck loop from underneath.Down to the left.Around the back of the small end to the right.Up to the center, towards neck loop.Through the neck loop and down to the right.Across the front to the left.Down through the loop you've just created in the front.
Explanation:
first-person omniscient
third-person limited
third-person omniscient
Answer:
first-person limited
Explanation:
It is told in the the first person, since the narrator is a character in the story as well, telling everything from his point of view. He narrates things as the events happen all from his own experiences and points of view. If he was omniscient, he would know more than his own personal experiences, but it is not the case here.
A. Arranged marriages are more practical than those based on romantic love.
B. True love is a sound basis for marriage.
C. Marriage is usually a family affair.
D. Different societies have different ideas about the purpose of marriage
Let us define each terms first:
· Redress is to correct something that is unfair or wrong.
· Complaint is a statement of something that you are unhappy or not satisfied with something.
· Warranty is a written statement that promises comprises of the durability of the product.
Therefore:
The term used to describe righting a wrong is negotiation is Redress.
A. My dog was unable to relocate it’s buried bone.
B. Our old oak tree has dropped all of it’s leaves.
C. The overplayed song has lost its appeal for me.
D. Its been too many weeks since it last rained.
Answer:
The answer is indeed letter C. The overplayed song has lost its appeal for me.
Explanation:
The options provided in the question concern the homophones "it's" and "its." They are commonly mistaken for each other dues to their sounding the same, and are consequently used erroneously. "It's" is the contraction of the subject pronoun "it" and the third-person singular verb "is." For that reason, "it's" is used as the subject of a clause, frequently substituting some previously mentioned noun or referring, for instance, to natural phenomena. The examples below help illustrate it:
- It's snowing again. - natural phenomenon
- My bike is making a weird noise when I try to start it. It's broken, I think. - substituting "my bike"
"Its", on the other hand, is a possessive adjective. It accompanies a noun, modifying it, to establish a relationship of possession between that noun and another one. Study the example below:
- That stray cat is constantly licking its paws. - the paws belong to the cat
Having that in mind, we can tell letter C is the only option that uses the correct homophone, since "its" establishes a relationship of possession between the song and the appeal. The song has an appeal. Its appeal (the song's) has been lost.
Letters A and B use "it's" when they should employ "its", and letter D does the opposite, using "its" when it actually needs the subject+verb "it's".
Answer:
TRUE
Explanation:
Answer:
Dante Alighieri.
Explanation: