<p>i put change color,idk why seems to flow better followed my gut lol</p>
<p>And superduck0, I put change colors because it’s making a transition from one color to another. Doesn’t colorize mean turn a color?</p>
<p>no Superduck colorize was not the answer. I think it was no change, colorized doesnt sound right. It was a short and simple answer like " he colored it" or something. <---- not the actually answer</p>
<p>if it was a noun, then definitely effect haha. ^^nothing with colorize, i believe it was change color or something</p>
<p>same here change color!</p>
<p>what about that indian girl astronaut, it was like she ran the marathon and to train she ran on a machine that connect to a harness and rope. Something of this variation, was it connect or connects?</p>
<p>I said connects because of parallel structure</p>
<p>it was connects because the noun was singular i think</p>
<p>On the Indian astronaut, what about the question that introduced the second part of the sentence about like citizens in India. I put the part about her father which was no change</p>
<p>i also put connects, it sound better (parallel)</p>
<p>me too no change because it wouldnt have made sense if it was like : besides america india watched her go up in space…like what? why would india give a ratt a** about an american they have enough problems to deal with lol</p>
<p>no i didnt put the father opne, i put even though she was an AMerican Citizen,… The passage had nothing to do with her parents or childhood (barely)</p>
<p>Yes, it was because her father was from india or something along those lines</p>
<p>I was confused about the first Indian astronaut and her dad question too. Was it no change?</p>
<p>how would they kow her father was Idian? He wasn’t mentioned throught the story, neither of her parents were making it unrelevant.</p>
<p>i put no change,because why would india be intrested? Unless they were partly from india, and her dads from india so yah</p>
<p>Yeah Indian wouldn’t care if her dad wasn’t indian</p>
<p>she’s indian, that’s why they care, not because her father was BORN in India. DO you start to care about people because you know where their father was born? Sayign although she was an american citizen, people in india still followed her work makes more sense</p>
<p>None of the other answers made sense.</p>
<p>But I think if they say the American citizen they should have had another sentence explaining about how she was Indian. Which it doesnt</p>