Does Jane have to do(Jane/do)homework for school every evening?
1.Jane can`t stay in bed today.She..........(go)to school
2.Jane..........(not/go) to school tomorrow.It`s a holiday.
3.Bob is a postman.-What time........(he/start) work every morning?
Ajutati-ma va rog
underlined he
A.
adjective
B.
interjection
C.
pronoun
D.
noun b or a?
Answer:
you can make 36 cups out of good luck (* sorry for answering late
Explanation:
B Snag a solo
C Cotton-like clouds
D Traveled far
C) cotton-like clouds
By 1993, British farmers were reporting up to one thousand new cases of BSE a week. Governments all around the world reacted by increasing testing for the disease and not allowing any cows to be eaten if they were at risk of having the disease. As sheep can also get a prion disease called scrapie, they were tested as well. Farmers were angry that they were losing their livestock, and nobody knew how to protect cows and people from the disease.
Consumers were also in a panic when they learned about BSE, and for a very good reason: prions are infectious. If you eat a prion from a “mad cow” or sheep, you are at risk for developing a human version of BSE. The public felt betrayed that their governments had underreacted to the problem or covered it up.
Eventually, in 1997, governments began to ban farmers from feeding their livestock high-risk meat and bone mixtures. With that ban, the epidemic quickly peaked, and by 2010 had largely disappeared. Over the years, half a million cows and two hundred people had been killed by prions.
The paragraphs of this excerpt would be best organized by adding
a table of contents.
captioned images.
dated subheadings.
a web diagram.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
Dated subheadings
Answer:
C. Dated subheadings
Explanation: