Answer: E. Emphasizes the mounting evidence for the complexity of the ocean’s currents
Explanation:
The author begins these sentences with “And below” to claim that beneath the surface currents there are other distinct currents with different speeds, directions, and volumes. By repeating “And below” at the beginning of the next sentence, the author suggests that there are yet other currents beneath these. The author’s arrangement of these sentences therefore suggests that the layers of distinct ocean currents are potentially endless. After making this suggestion, the author then includes the fact that there is photographic evidence supporting the idea that there are currents on the sea bottom, which had once been thought to be still. By arranging the sentences in this manner, the author affirms her claim regarding the unending complexity of the ocean’s current by revealing that there is already proof to support the claim.
Well it isn't D and it has nothing to do with B even thought the Decoration involved and included slavery it isn't the main thing going on there.
Your answer is A
Answer:
After engineers tested it, the smart car was said to protect the passenger well enough in a car crash test.
Explanation:
Answer: The uses are as follows :D
1. Lithium: heat resistive ceramics, aircraft building, tritium production
2. sodium: coolant in nuclear reactors, soap making, street light manufacture (e.g. sodium vapor lamps)
3. Potassium: tanning of leather, manufacture of inks, making gunpowder
4. Rubidium: thermoelectric generator, making atomic clocks, working fluid in vapor turbines
5. Cesium: catalyst for hydrogenation of some organic compounds, vacuum tubes, photovoltaic cells
6. Francium: extremely radioactive and extremely rare so not used often
Answer:
Form
Explanation:
It isn't theme. Theme is the message of a passage or text. (Not to be confused with main idea, which is the the overall point the passage or text was written. ) It isn't figurative language, because that is a whole <em>type </em>of writing structure. (For example, instead of saying, "She felt sick and dizzy," you could use figurative language and say, "Her legs felt like cooked spaghetti noodles and her stomach started doing somersaults." Heck, it's a little crazy, but it makes the writing better. Lastly, it isn't plot, since plot is pretty much what <em>happens</em> in the story. I would call it conflict, but it isn't always problems. Maybe a girl finds her long-lost father. That would be part of the plot but not conflict. (Well, I guess it <em>could</em> cause some conflict if you think about it.
So, long story short, the answer is form.