Question
Which sentence correctly uses a word with a Latin root that means "stormy weather"?
Responses
She thought the news of the trial outcome was unjust.
She thought the news of the trial outcome was unjust.
We survived the tempest only to be trapped in our house by all the water.
We survived the tempest only to be trapped in our house by all the water.
She said that though she knew it would be challenging, she was equal to the task.
She said that though she knew it would be challenging, she was equal to the task.
We were worried that the lure of the temptation would overcome his good sense.
Responses
She thought the news of the trial outcome was unjust.
She thought the news of the trial outcome was unjust.
We survived the tempest only to be trapped in our house by all the water.
We survived the tempest only to be trapped in our house by all the water.
She said that though she knew it would be challenging, she was equal to the task.
She said that though she knew it would be challenging, she was equal to the task.
We were worried that the lure of the temptation would overcome his good sense.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The sentence that correctly uses a word with a Latin root meaning "stormy weather" is:
"We survived the tempest only to be trapped in our house by all the water."
The word "tempest" has Latin roots and refers to a violent storm.
"We survived the tempest only to be trapped in our house by all the water."
The word "tempest" has Latin roots and refers to a violent storm.
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