You didn't indicate which piece of glass art the question is about
Coming from a philosophical standpoint luck doesn't exist. When you get "lucky" it isn't an outside force that is rewarding you for helping a grandma crossing the street, it is just a concept we came up with to give reason behind things that seemingly shouldn't happen.
From a spiritual/religious standpoint it is the opposite. Luck could be your god(s) rewarding you for good behavior, or just making you lucky for no reason but to have fun. People tend to believe in luck as some outside force due to religious or spiritual beliefs.
Answer:
There was once an Emperor who had no children and needed to choose a successor. They were to go home to their villages, plant the seed in a pot and tend it for a year. ... When they return in a year, the Emperor would judge their efforts and choose his successor.
Explanation:
<span>"I drive" is the adjective clause. It modifies "the car." </span>
The answer which best describes this summary is A. it has a variety of sentence structures.
I got this answer by eliminating the other ones:
B is incorrect because most sentences begin with dependent clauses. C is incorrect because there are some simple independent clauses - not all of them are complex-compound. D is incorrect because almost none of the sentences begins with the subject.