1. a. The city council placed an injunction against new buildings of more than three stories. b. Mv parents' injunction was "Be home by midnight." c. She sent out fifteen injunctions to her birthday partv. d. Some Muslim women obey the injunction to wear a din dor, a garment covering all but the face and hands. 2- a. By urging independence from (Irrat Britain, Mahalma Gandhi brought on a sharp juncture in Indian affairs. b. We agreed to meet at the juncture of three1 major highways. c. At junctures, when the world's supply of petroleum appears to dwindle, nuclear energy becomes a crucial issue
interesting, where is the question?
HELP WHEN YOU GUYS ARE DONE PLEASE
Circle the letter of the sentence in which the word in bold-faced type is used incorrectly
which words are in bold-faced type?
wait ill try to post a screen shot instead
@Aamirgsen
HELP IVE BEEN WAITING 2 HOURS
cool this is what i have to do for my homework but i already did mys but ill help you still
need help?
PLEASE HELP
ok
can you please help
yeah but hold on i have the same Vocabulary like you im just looking at my book before i give you the wrong answers. do you want me to explain this to do? so it can help you better to understand.
the first thing is for you so read the definition so it can help you
do you have to the definitions for these bold words
Stringo to draw together tightly
um okay
please help
the first definition that goes with injunction Injunction- An authoritative command or other
aptitude (ap'ia rood) n. A natural talent or ability; quickness in learning. Fulfilling an essential role, Cherokee women for centuries proved their aptitude for agriculture, developing ingenious farming methods. 2. inept (in ept') |/// = <L. "not"] adj. I. Without skill. So inept that he cannot kick a football or fly a kite, Charlie Brown suffers Lucy's perennial contempt. 2. Inappropriate or out of place; foolish or absurd. To say "Hi, there!" upon meeting a dignified official would be inept, ineptitude, w. Familiar Words conjunction join junction Challenge Words conjoin enjoin junta subjoin subjunctive JUNGO, JUNGERE, JUNXI, JUNCTUM <L "to join" 3. adjunct (aj'urtgkt) \ad <L. "to," "toward"! n. Ail added part not essential to the whole. The coccyx, or "tailbone," an adjunct of the spinal column, no longer has a function. adjunctive, adj. 36 VOCABULARY FROM CLASSICAL ROOTS Familiar Words Sfeict presjige restrict restriction 4. conjugate (kon'ja gat) [cnn= cum <L. "with"] tr. v. To give forms of verbs in a fixed order. Conjugate the present tense of the verb "to see" as follows: I see, you see, he sees (singular); we see, you see, they see (plural). conjugation, n. 5. injunction (In jungk'shnn) [in <L. "in"] n. An authoritative command or order. University students in China received an injunction against protest marches. 6. juncture (jungk'chor) n. 1. A serious state of affairs. Environmentalists say that at this juncture we must protect rain forests around the globe to prevent harmful atmospheric changes, 2. The condition or point of being joined. The Panama Canal has provided the juncture of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. 7. subjugate (suh'ja gat') | sub <L. "under"] tr. v. To conquer; to dominate completely. Soon after the German army subjugated Poland in 1 939, Britain declared war. subjugation, n. STRINGO, STRINGERE, STRINXI, STRICTUM <L. "to draw together tightly/' "to tie" 8. astringent (a stnn'jsmt) \a= ad <l.. "to"] adj. Harsh; severe. Astringent criticism from one political candidate often draws an equally biting response from an opponent. n. A substance that tightens tissues. (In medicine, a substance constricting living tissue.) If you nick yourself, apply an astringent to stop the bleeding. astringency, n. LESSONS 5 AND 6: JOINING 37 Challenge Words constrain constraint restrictive stricture 9. strait (strut) n. 1. A narrow passage of water connecting two large bodies of water. The Strait of Gibraltar links the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. U. (usually plural) A difficulty or had position. During the Depression of the 1930s, many people were in economic straits. 10. stringent (strin'jsm) adj. \ Severe; constricted; tight. Members of the Constitutional Convention met under stringent rules of secrecy lest rumor leak out and subvert their effort. '.>. Pertaining to scarcity of money. Because of stringent budget cuts, some schools could no longer finance programs in music and art
do you know which three letters are correct on #1
Nope
ok hold on brb ill help you dont worry so hold on
@valleygirl
You need to not write dumba** stuff on peoples questions
What do you think @BatmanEater1 ?
I think it might be a,b,c or d
For which one?
I did the lesson, I have the answers, but I can't help you unless you tell me for which one?
exercise 6b
No, what do you think the answer is for the first question?
I don't know that's why I'm asking this question
Would you command someone to come to your birthday party?
what?
An injunction is a command, so would you command someone to come to your birthday party?
@BatmanEater1 ?
yes I think?
Um, no. You wouldn't go up to someone and say "Come to my birthday party, that's an order." So, C would be correct, or in the case of the question, wrong. :)
is number 2 d?
Yep
sorry its 5:09 here and I need to sleep so I'm just going to guess all the answers
Urm, okay...
what I do each day 7:00 wake up eat ceral brush teath 8:00 school 3:00 play games feed fish 5:00 practice keyboard 8:00 sleep
Ah okay, so what do you think the other ones are?
@BatmanEater1 ?
dcb for the rest are they right?
d and c are right, but for the last one it is C.
I got 100% thanks
You're welcome, remember to close your question when you are done. :)
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