The correct answer is the first option - <span>We all wanted to win so badly that we were practically willing the ball through the hoop.
You should write 'badly' and not 'bad' because you need to use the adverb rather than the adjective to modify the verb 'to win.' To use the adjective 'bad' here is really colloquial (and grammatically incorrect) so it cannot be used in formal writing, but rather only in informal speech.
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Answer:
a feature article
Explanation:
A feature article is a textual genre that allows the disclosure of a fact (or a subject) in a detailed and in-depth way. For this reason, the feature article has several elements that explain the fact that is being displayed, in addition to showing the opinion and the different interpretation of several people who are, in some way, related to the fact, allowing the viewer or reader to have several forms of interpretation that allow him to reach his own conclusion about what is being exposed.
An example of this can be seen in the text above, where it shows a feature article that explains a fact (transport workers' strike), shows the reasons that caused this fact to occur and presents two opinions (against and in favor of the strike) about the fact .
When we say narrative structure, this means that it is narrating something that happened in a sequence of events. Therefore, the answer for this would be option D. The way in which James Baldwin used a narrative structure is in <span>the essay that tells a story about the narrators relationship with his father. Hope this answer helps.
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Answer:
It can be lays or lies. But I'm going with the guy on the bottom.
Explanation:
See what I did there?
:|
:)
:D
~<em>Jack Pullman </em>
<em>p.s. mark for brainliest, please!</em>
Answer:
C) long benches with a back
Explanation:
(noun
)
(in a church) one of a number of fixed, benchlike seats with backs, accessible by aisles, for the use of the congregation.
an enclosed seat in a church, or an enclosure with seats, usually reserved for a family or other group of worshipers.
those occupying pews; congregation.