Answer:
I haven't seen a dictionary in a while but I believe that C is right
I read “Thank you ma’am last year so I could probably help you with it
A prefix meaning<span> “with,” “together,” “in association,” and (with intensive force) “completely,” occurring in loanwords from Latin ( commit): used in the formation of compound words before b, p, m: combine; compare; commingle. Expand. Also, co-, </span>col<span>-, </span>con<span>-, cor-.</span>
Answer:
The coffee isn´t ever hot.
Explanation:
Ain´t isn´t proper english, and there are alot of redundant uses of words with the same connotation in the other answers.