Answer:
The answer I think is correct is B.
Explanation:
I think this one is correct because this makes more sense then the rest, there is a coma ofc, but it also says that the bus company is going to announce their new schedule in the next few days because they shouldn't take too long to announce their bus company. Hopefully this helps you.
Answer:
Holmes realized from the beginning that the Red-Headed League was simply too preposterous to be real and that it must therefore have been a ploy to get Wilson out of his shop for a few hours every day. The fact that Spaulding was willing to work for so little money and spent a lot of time alone in the basement suggested to Holmes that Spaulding was doing something illicit in the cellar. When he noticed the bank nearby, Holmes had suspected that Spaulding was digging a tunnel to the bank. Holmes pounded on the sidewalk outside Wilson’s shop to determine whether the ground was hollow underneath, and he knocked on the door for directions so that he could see whether the knees of Spaulding’s pants were worn away. The fact that the league dissolved so suddenly suggested to Holmes that the robbery was imminent, and he was therefore able to make preparations and capture John Clay.
Explanation:
Answer:
bro im not writing an essay for 5 points
Explanation:
Answer:
Just link the article with its name.
Explanation:
Answer:
The correct answer is <u>B</u>: It communicates the idea that just because one cannot see decay or destruction occurring, that does not mean it isn't happening.
Explanation:
In this excerpt, Alan Paton tries to say that injustice and inequality are widely extended in South Africa, although we are not able to see it. He compares the destruction of South Africa with things that occur in nature, like leaf silently falling in the forest or white ants who are eating away the food. He wants to say that we shouldn't neglect things that are happening just because they occur in silence.
<em>Cry, the Beloved Country</em> is a novel written by South African writer Alan Paton, first time published in 1948. It tells a story about Stephen Kumalo, a black priest who goes to Johannesburg to find his son Absalom.