I need help too but noone answers my questions, we’re on the same road
Answer and Explanation:
<u>A complex sentence is formed by joining an independent clause and a dependent one. However, we have four different sentences here. We must join them and use a subordinating conjunction to form a complex sentence.</u>
One possibility is using the subordinating conjunction "since", or "provided that":
- Since choosing between a desktop and a laptop models is a decision for the consumer, the decision is personal.
- Provided that choosing between a desktop and a laptop models is a decision for the consumer, the decision is personal.
Another possibility is using the conjunction "because":
- Choosing between a desktop and a laptop models is a decision for the consumer because it is personal.
It can be inferred that in "The Canterbury Tales" and "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight", the narrator describes them only in light of the good deeds they have done. (Option B).
<h3>What is an example of the above?</h3>
In The Canterbury Tales, for example, the narrator considers the Knight to be the noblest of the pilgrims, symbolizing military strength, loyalty, honor, charity, and excellent manners. The Knight always acts politely and mildly, never saying anything negative about anyone.
Note that a narrator is a person via whose perspective, paradigm, or point of view a story is narrated or told.
Learn more about narrators:
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Question 1 Answer:
The Nurse chose not to tell Juliet's mother about the "relationship" and marriage ceremony between Juliet and Romeo. She was loyal to Juliet, her needs, and her desires. She did not rat out on her.
<span>In our day and age, we are prone to choose friends over family. (Not everyone is, but it's something that is evident in our society and has caught my attention.) Normally, when certain peers violate a family principal we are predisposed to defending them or turning an eye over their misdemeanor. It's similar to the Nurse and Juliet's situation/relationship.
Question 2 Answer:
</span>A scene in the play implied that Romeo was wrong for giving "the slip" to his peers for a woman. Friendship then was very valued. Seemingly it was not common to withdraw from or neglect friends - mainly of the same gender - for the opposite sex.
<span>Nowadays, we aren't hesitant to end relations with trusted individuals for a new companionship. Gender usually does not play a role in our associations whatsoever, and 'the slip' is widely performed by many without shame.
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