Answer:
The boys tossed
basketballs through a hoop in the yard.
Explanation:
it is a ad verb mark me brainliest plz?
tossed I guess.
The protagonist is the main person in the literary work, that is usually followed during the work and who often has to face a conflict or a difficulty.
In "The Little Match Girl" it's the girl herself: <span>b. The little match girl</span>
Answer:
Nila, a young girl of 14 is a student of class 9 of 'X' school. She was a poor girl but had an aspiration to help her family for a better life. On her way to school, a boy named Alam used to tease her very often but she didn't get frustrated rather she walked on quickly to school.
Alam ran after her and pulled her roughly and asked her where she was running to, Nila was scared and told him that she was going to school. Alam started laughing and told her to go to school, when she comes back, he'll continue teasing her.
Answer:
Louis David Riel was a Canadian politician, a founder of the province of Manitoba, and a political leader of the Métis people of the Canadian Prairies. He led two rebellions against the government of Canada and its first post-Confederation prime minister, John A. Macdonald.
Answer: C) The heartbreak of unrequited love is akin to death.
Explanation: From the given options, the one that represents the larger universal idea about life that the mourner's whispers convey in the excerpt from "Violets" is the corresponding to option C: The heartbreak of unrequited love is akin to death, because in the excerpt the narrator says that a broken heart ceased to flutter being still young, indicating that the sensation of a broken heart resembles death.