The sentence which uses the verb harrow correctly as defined in the dictionary entry is :
Option B
A word reference is a posting of lexemes from the vocabulary of at least one explicit dialects, regularly organized one after another in order or by extremist and stroke for ideographic dialects, which might remember data for definitions, utilization, derivations, elocutions, interpretation.
Inside every passage, you will see the word, its grammatical feature, its elocution, and at least one definitions.
Every definition will likewise for the most part incorporate an example sentence to assist you with deciding how the word is utilized and regardless of whether that definition matches how the word is utilized in the message you are perusing.
Notwithstanding its fundamental capacity of characterizing words, a word reference might give data about their elocution, linguistic structures and capacities, historical underpinnings, syntactic idiosyncrasies, variation spellings, and antonyms.
The word harrowed means being attacked or to cruely attack some one so here in the given context the dog attacked the cat until it leaved the room so the word is used to define the sitution drawn in the excerpt.
For more information, refer the following link:
Answer:
I believe the answer would be the second one, the dog harrowed the poor cat...
Explanation:
"Empty" words refer to Low Information Content (LIC) expressions such as these listed below; X signals words or phrases that you should drop entirely from your written communications. Note how many of these phrases start (and end) with little connecting words such as: at, by, for, in, it, of, to, and with.
hope it helps!
Whoa, what? I thought the point was that he actually was a terrible person. He opens the door and discovers his life is messed up because of the bad choices he made.
ANNA:
You got some text to back that up?
JENNIFER:
Good call. Let's look in the book. [opening book] Here's what happens right after he opens the door: "Looking into space is like looking into a void. My world is a void. No peace. No drama. Just a hollow room with no ceiling, no floor, no walls. This was all I had, and I choked back a sob."
A. Asking clarifying questions
B. Outlining the discussion plan
C. Asking rhetorical questions
D. Returning to the text
The correct answer is D.
The conversation given above involves three people. Daniel was making some references to a section of a book and Anna was asking him if he has any evidence to back up what he was saying. Jennifer interfered by suggesting that they open the book and check out the facts. This discussion technique used by Jennifer is called returning to text. It involves checking out facts from a book.
Answer:
D. returning to the text
Explanation:
2.families
3 businesses
4.professional adults
A statement we accept without proof is called a postulate. It is also known as an axiom. These are rules which are accepted to be true without any evidence that will prove these. For instance, the postulates in the kinetic molecular theory.
Answer:
(D) "Read what this successful executive says about his first job…"
Explanation:
This, that, these and those are demonstrative pronouns which are used to refer to a noun in terms of number and distance or closeness. In that respect, this indicates that the noun is singular and near; that shows a singular far noun; these exhibits plurality and proximity; and those demonstrates plural and distant objects.