I would say the third one but i am not so sure about it
C Quick Answer
Her religious background in the main body of the what was given establishes her as a Quaker. If that's all she was, she would have been forgotten 10 years after her death. D is almost irrelevant: it is not the answer.
B is true but the main body of the excerpt is much more concerned with why she broke "the law" and voted.
A
That could have been put somewhere in the paragraph, but it is not a good conclusion.
C is right because after her death, what she worked tirelessly to achieve came to pass with the passage of the 19th amendment.
The most enslaved people in the world for the longest period of time is definitely women. The 19th Amendment was part of a needed change in world (male) thinking.
The originator of transformational grammar was Noam Chomsky.
Fiction:<em> </em>A tiger, a lion, or any strong animal will judge us the most. In their eyes, humans would be weak and small. "Our children grow just a bit and then they're on their own. Most humans don't live in packs-we might. Our lionesses and tigers will hunt small things down-just because they all our weak." Says the strong animals. "That baby human is <em>crawling </em>while the others walk on their two! It's so silly!"
Maybe Truth: A tiger, a lion, or any strong animal will judge us the most. In their eyes, humans would be weak and small. They think their children are smarter, stronger, and better. Some will live in packs, like wolves or hyenas. Because of this, they find food from smaller animals. In their language, they might tease us- because of the baby's cry, because of the children's immature-ness, because of the adult's forgetting-ness...
Brainliest?
It's the first revision: <span>Bring it back by the scruff of the neck. Ere you have reached the station you will have brought it back about forty times. First, do not despair. Then, continue. Finally, keep it up.
Signal words used to describe a sequence of events (in a chronological order) are: first, second, third, then, next, before, after, first... last, initially, until, finally, lastly...</span>