This prefix comes from the french language that relate to the words “surrender, survive” this can mean to give “up” or to be “over” something.
I hope this helps!
This excerpt from the "los Angeles Sunday Times" (June 1899) might reflect <span>society’s discomfort with women’s emerging independence in 1899 (option A). It is suggested that the author of the book (Kate Chopin) wrote an "</span>unhealthy introspective and morbid in feeling as that sort of woman must inevitably be".
Can you show the question because I don’t know what to respond
My siblings and I Because me is used as I and you sister and brother can be used as you siblings