<span>I, my, me, he, his, him</span>
Answer:
D. by adding "Specifically" to the beginning of the sentence
Explanation:
Sentence 2 states: They are suffering various effects of sleep deprivation.
Sentence 3 elaborates on specific effects of sleep deprivation that the teens are suffering from.
It seems that you have missed the necessary options for us to answer this question so I had to look for it. Anyway, here is the answer. If Helium is naturally occurring, lighter-than-air gas that is used commercially to fill balloons, the statement that best describes how science was impacted by society in regards to helium is this: <span> Helium has been mass produced to meet consumer demands for parties.</span>
This sentence gives an overall negative connotation because you're using a derivative means of describing the woman and he jewelry along with saying that the amount she is wearing is "a lot" more than what you would expect. It conjures up an image of a street adult woman with gold jewelry and thug-like clothing. It would not be an appropriate way to describe your grandmother given the age gap in both vocabulary and the overall negative connotation of the sentence.
Well, it depends on the genre of that non-fictional book. For instance, a mystery book would make the audience interested if there was an unsolved mystery included, but an adventure book, for instance, might hook the reader if it was actually based on historical events and something like the book described had actually happened. Therefore, for a fictional book, I would say all of these interest me depending on the type of book.