The adverb profoundly means something similar to “extremely,” with the additional sense that it's something intense and deeply felt. If you're profoundly confused, you're very confused — confused in a way that seems bottomless. The word can also describe something that affects you greatly.
<span>They were all successful. Williams was successful in many ways. He worked hard to become a doctor at a time when the doors of the medical profession was closed</span>
Answer:
A.) Narrate the story.
Explanation:
The speech bubbles as seen in the illustration, were used to narrate what transpired around the 1990s. The women of Iran were greatly restricted by the government and every action of theirs were perceived as rebellion. This was the aftermath of series of protests that were done before this time.
The restriction to freedom was so much that the women no longer had the freewill to make their own independent decisions or reason on matters as free people. All the descriptions of the situation took a narrative form.
I feel that the above mentioned topic sentence is a good topic sentence because it includes the author's opinion and a limited topic that tells the readers what the text is going to be about without outright telling them.
(For the second post, I think you're supposed to finish the topic sentence's paragraph.)
First one so A it would be