Answer:
A
Explanation:
Jefferson Davis refers to many events which occurred in the past and quotes the Constitution (dont know for sure which one he's quoting) meaning he feels that the North is breaking the principles that this nation was built on.
On the one hand, <u><em>your</em></u> is a possessive and means that something belongs or is related to "you", whoever that subject is. On the other hand, <em><u>you're</u></em> is a contraction. It is short for "you are" that includes the personal pronoun <em>you</em> and the conjugated verb <em>to be</em>. Therefore, the sentence that accurately uses the homophones "your" and "you're" is: Don’t forget to pick up your homework before you leave.
If your choices are the following:
A) pronoun-antecedent voice agreement error.
B) pronoun-antecedent number agreement error.
C) pronoun-antecedent gender agreement error.
D) pronoun-antecedent subject agreement error.
Then the answer is letter D.
C. The mediator is the answer because even though the question is trying to gauge whether you know the meaning of the word mediator, it is also providing a grammatical solution to itself. None of the other words fit in that sentence correctly except for mediator, and also the word mediator (someone who is keeping peace between differing parties) fits the actions the sentence is proposing.