Answer:
Explanation:
The jury’s decision to convict Tom Robinson for a crime he clearly did not commit plagues Jem (and many readers) as an intolerable miscarriage of justice. The most obvious reason justice isn’t served is because the jury’s overwhelming racism prevents Tom from getting a fair trial. Another reason the jury finds Tom guilty is because both Mayella Ewell and her father, Bob, both perjured themselves on the stand. In addition to the presumption of an impartial jury, the justice system operates on the assumption that witnesses will tell “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth” after being sworn in to testimony. But both Mayella and Bob lied rather than admit that Mayella tried to kiss Tom. Tom’s race, combined with the Ewells’ lies, proved enough for the racist jury to find Tom guilty, even in the face of overwhelming evidence of Tom’s innocence.
It intensifies the conflict.
A complication adds to the problem of the story. The stories problem is the conflict. Many times there is more than one complication. When labeling a plot line for a story, the complications can be found in the rising action. This takes place between the exposition and the climax. The exposition of a story introduces the characters, setting, and conflict. The climax is the pivotal point in the conflict. The character can never return to the way things were when the story started out. Something or someone has been irrevocably changed.
Enkai is the creator of the world, and using a tree, he created humans. He split the tree into three parts. One of the parts became the father of Maasai, and he was given a stick for animal herding.
Answer:
B. They connect a dependent clause with an independent clause.
Explanation:
Dependent clauses, as the name suggests, don't convey the full idea or thought and they can't stand on their own as a complete sentence.
The only way they can be meaningful is when they are connected to independent clause. This connection is mediated via subordinating conjunctions.
Subordinating conjunctions help us link ideas from dependent and independent clause into a full, meaningful sentence.
Some of the subordinating conjunctions often used are because, when, although, since, if, whenever, until, unless etc.