Answer:
B. Allow African American children to attend the school of their choice
Explanation:
Answer:
B
Explanation:
Who and whose (which is wrong for a couple of reasons) refer to people. So neither of those 2 can be the answer.
Which and that are all that is left.
The usage is very close. Which, I think, is the correct answer. It usually begins a clause that adds more information to the noun (usually) that it modifies. In this case, the clause modifies mammal and tells it that is unique in that it can fly.
That is normally a pronoun that oddly modifies again usually a specific noun. You are not talking about a bat that lives in your back yard and that you have named. Bats in general are the only mammals that fly.
I still would use which.
<span>A prepositional phrase is a series of words consisting of a preposition and its object. For a prepositional phrase to functioin as an adjective, it must describe something along with specify its position. The option that does this is B. We bought cookies in the red package. </span>