I think the answers A -connect its topic to those of other speeches.
D. Both are tools for linking pieces of information at different online locations.
Answer:
1. an invention
2. completely
3. interesting
Explanation:
Since the word "invention" begins with a vowel sound /ɪnˈvɛnʃn/, we should use the indefinite article "an". As for "interested": the adjectives that end with "-ed" describe some sort of condition, feeling of either thing or human, temporary in general; the adjectives with "-ing" describe some kind of quality, generally permanent. Therefore, we should use "interesting". The rest is contextual.
<span>The correct answer is the sea, or more precisely the ocean. It is a sea novel about a sea captain who believes that his son is being chased by a colomber, that is, a shark that wants to kill its marked enemy, and will restlesly follow it until it catches it. Something like the alligator in Peter Pan who keeps following captain Hook.</span>
This phrase is from the poem "The Future Glory" by John Trumbull. He was a renowned American poet who lived from 1750 to 1831.
<span>This phrase is the last line in one of the stanzas in his poems. The poet starts the stanza with praises for the proverbial Queen. He describes her splendour and her radiance. This phrase for the Queen suggests that the Queen is the ruler of all the empires but when she sees her own men who were fighting for her glory and rule injured, she becomes a nurse to them and brings them back to health.</span>