Answer:
The comma after 1999
Explanation:
You can remove the comma after 1999 on question seven to make it look a little less clustered.
B.Paddling out to waves taller than my dad.
C.Mom frying bacon and scrambling eggs for breakfast.
D.The sound of waves crashing on shore woke me up at dawn.
Which is a run-on sentence? A.Heather, who brought a tray of cakes and cookies, set them on the table at the potluck. B.When you come home from school, please put the trash out and water the lawn. C.Her dog, Goldie, goes to agility training, which directs dogs through an obstacle course. D.We thought we were the only ones on the tour, dozens of people were lined up at the gate.Which is the subject of this sentence?
Look in the index for a mention of this type of error.
A.mention
B.index
C.(you)
D.typeWhich is the subject of this sentence? Tuesday morning the Red Wheelbarrow Gardening Center will open. A.morning B.Red Wheelbarrow Gardening Center C.center D.Tuesday morning
Which is the subject of this sentence? Last year, wasn't Carson City in Nevada near our campsite? A.Carson City B.Nevada C.city D.year
Which is the entire verb phrase in this sentence?
The whole event had been secretly planned by the Wong twins.
A.had been
B.had been secretly planned
C.had been planned
D.planned
Which is the entire verb phrase in this sentence? Couldn't he have been to the store and back by now? A.have been B.couldn't have been C.could have D.could have been
Is the word "their" or the word "there" correct in that sentence?
B.
I often forget to cross my t's when I'm writing quickly.
C.
The word love appears five times in that note. (love is italicized)
D.
Mike's home address begins with a "2."
A.
for
B.
but
C.
Gee
D.
not
Dr. Smith is an geographer with a special interest in nineteenth-century France.
hope it helps
Can you choose mine as the brainliest answer???
Liberties refer to freedoms, often legally protected, whereas losses are about the deprivation of something, which could include liberties. While both concepts deal with the presence or absence of something, they apply to different contexts: Liberties are about legal-social freedoms, and losses refer to a wide range of negative experiences.
The terms liberties and losses are related yet distinct, expressing two different aspects of human experience. Liberties usually refer to freedoms that people have, often guaranteed by a governing body like the state or federal government. For example, civil liberties are freedoms from restriction by the government and are usually protected by legal documents like the US Constitution.
Losses, on the other hand, typically refer to the experience of being deprived of something, whether it be a physical possession, a loved one, or a more abstract concept like innocence. It could hypothetically include the loss of liberties, but it is much broader in scope as it could include other types of loss as well.
So, while both terms deal with the concept of having something or not having it, they apply to different arenas. Liberties are more concerned with legal and social freedoms, while losses encompass a wider range of negative experiences.
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