A dictionary.
(Really can be an adverb and an interjection)
That would depend upon the topic of your speech.
Grammar pedant here:Direct/reported speech: "How would you know?"Indirect speech: He asked her how she would knoworHe asked her how she knew.Word order is v important. It switches.Direct speech with speech marks uses one tense which in indirect speech, shifts one tense back & lacks speech marks. We also drop the qustion mark.NOT he asked her how she knows, or he asked her how would she know.
The quotation is: "Chewing, licking and sucking are extremely widespread mammalian activities, which, in terms of casual observation, have obvious similarities with speech." (MacNeilage, 1998). - Since it talks about teeth, tongue and lips, it would be from the physical adaptation source in the selections you were given.
A writer would use logos in a speech to show a logical line of reasoning.
the part of speech for city-state would be a noun
Roget's Thesaurus Roget's Thesaurus
Thesaurus
he said he was going to exterminate them Interestingly enough, he didn't say that in public anyway ... or do you have a reference to a really reliable source?
almanac
ENCYCLOPEDIA
almanac
A telephone book.
A thesaurus would be the ideal reference source to find synonyms for the word "angry."
To reference a reference within a reference, you would cite the original source you used, followed by "cited in" and then the secondary source where you found the information. Make sure to acknowledge both sources in your references list to maintain academic integrity.
A thesaurus or a dictionary
A history textbook.
dictionary!!!