They’re similar since they end in -ter and -tor, which generally sound similar, but they’re different as “director” is a noun meaning a person who directs something, while “shatter” is a verb meaning to break something into tiny pieces (you can shatter a window, a glass, a plate, etc).
The answer to the given question above would be the last option. <span>In The Importance of Being Earnest, how Jack finally discovers his father’s and his, name is when he finds it in the Army Lists. Hope this answers your question. Have a great day ahead!</span>
<span>We saw <em>The Hunger Games</em> this weekend, and we loved it!
This sentence uses italics correctly, if indeed the original question showed the title of the movie in italics. Essays should be in quotations, and the final sentence is missing the end quotation mark, so this is the only option of a correct answer if the title is italicized. </span>
The correct choice is of course <u>to </u><u>determine </u><u>the </u><u>most </u><u>important </u><u>facts </u><u>and </u><u>information.</u><u>.</u><u>. </u>
The answer is “I wish you’d stop talking long enough to listen to me”
Explanation:
Look where it says, “She said quietly” that’s how you’d know