Leaphorn does not trust O'Malley
According to Laphron, O'Malley possess the character that is had by typical Federal agencies' employees, acting only like a loyal servant for the big man upstairs.
But Lephron does not let his opinion to intervene with the quality in any of his works, but he seems to can't be fully truthful to O'Malley
<u>Answer:</u>
<em>"My songs do tell how true thou art" (Sir Thomas Wyatt, 1557)</em>
<em>"And the night is a-cold" (William Blake, 1783)</em>
<em>"Little Lamb, who made thee?" (William Blake, 1789)</em>
<u>Explanation:</u>
These are the three lines from the given situations which makes use of the iambic feet. The terms in the poetry helps in the description of the rhythm and the small words, The group of syllables are used for the description of the feet and the type of the foot used. The "unstressed syllables" are used following the stressed syllables.
Answer:
The answer is B: by describing Toby as "a thin, hyper, dirty dog" with "a plastic cone around his neck"
Explanation:
I took the test
Minerva knew all and could help Ulysses better.
Noun clauses are dependent clauses acting as nouns. They begin with words such as <em>how</em>, <em>that</em>, <em>what</em>, <em>who</em>, <em>whoever</em>, <em>whom</em>, <em>where</em>, <em>when</em>, whether, <em>which</em>, <em>whichever</em> and why. What is more, they can act as subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, predicative nominatives or as objects of prepositions.
Taking all this into account, the noun clauses found in the sentences presented are the following ones: "whatever you do" and "what she should major in at college". In both cases, the noun clauses in question are actings as the subjects of the sentences.