The underlined clause, 'Whenever I walk the dog', is a dependent clause as it is not a complete sentence and is dependent on other independent clause, ' I feel great'.
A dependent clause is an incomplete sentence which is dependent on an independent clause to make a complete meaningful sentence. A dependent clause does not have a literal meaning.
In the sentence, 'Whenever I walk the dog, I feel great', there are two clauses, the first part of the sentence is a dependent clause and the second part is an independent clause, which is completing the sentence.
Therefore, option, B, 'A dependent clause', is correct.
Learn more about dependent clause, here,
b. pleasing
c. smell
d. sweet
the answer to this question is A. heavy
Nonverbal gesture:
Type of gesture:
2. Statement: "I don't agree with you."
Nonverbal gesture:
Type of gesture:
3. Statement: "How was lunch?"
Nonverbal gesture:
Type of gesture:
4. Statement: "My watch stopped. What time is it?"
Nonverbal gesture:
Type of gesture
5. Statement: "Whoa! What did you just say?"
Nonverbal gesture:
Type of gesture:
1. Statement: "That is perfect!"
Nonverbal gesture: looking sad. (Conflicting)
Type of gesture: non conventional
2. Statement: "I don't agree with you."
Nonverbal gesture: at the same time, turning your head from side to side. (Complementing)
Type of gesture: conventional
3. Statement: "How was lunch?"
Nonverbal gesture: speaking aloud and showing your enthusiasm. (Accenting)
Type of gesture: Deictic
4. Statement: "My watch stopped. What time is it?"
Nonverbal gesture: looking at your watch. (Complementing)
Type of gesture: Ionic
5. Statement: "Whoa! What did you just say?"
Nonverbal gesture: asking the same twice. (Repeating)
Type of gesture: Deictic
1. Statement: "That is perfect!"
Nonverbal gesture: I wil make a round with my thumb and my index finger.
Type of gesture: hand gesture
2. Statement: "I don't agree with you."
Nonverbal gesture: I wll move my head from side to side.
Type of gesture: face gesture
3. Statement: "How was lunch?"
Nonverbal gesture: I will close my hand and take to the mouth.
Type of gesture: hand and face gesture
4. Statement: "My watch stopped. What time is it?"
Nonverbal gesture: I will point to my watch.
Type of gesture Hand gesture
5. Statement: "Whoa! What did you just say?"
Nonverbal gesture: I will poin to my ear.
Type of gesture: hand gesture
Answer:
led
Explanation:
the verb is in past tense. its a verb since its an action word describing what Moses is doing.
Like one great garden show'd,
And thro' the wreaths of floating dark upcurl'd,
Rare sunrise flow'd.
And Freedom rear'd in that august sunrise
Her beautiful bold brow,
When rites and forms before his burning eyes
Melted like snow.
There was no blood upon her maiden robes
Sunn'd by those orient skies;
But round about the circles of the globes
Of her keen eyes
And in her raiment's hem was traced in flame
WISDOM, a name to shake
All evil dreams of power--a sacred name.
And when she spake,
Her words did gather thunder as they ran,
And as the lightning to the thunder
Which follows it, riving the spirit of man,
Making earth wonder,
So was their meaning to her words.
No sword
Of wrath her right arm whirl'd,
But one poor poet's scroll, and with 'his' word
She shook the world.
The last lines of the poem suggest the richness of a poet's thoughts:
"Her words did gather thunder as they ran,
And as the lightning to the thunder
Which follows it, riving the spirit of man,
Making earth wonder,
So was their meaning to her words.
No sword
Of wrath her right arm whirl'd,
But one poor poet's scroll, and with 'his' word
She shook the world."
The word is considered a weapon on par with a sword; the poem is capable of shaking the world. The poet's words are like thunder and lighting, "riving the spirit of man". Their effect on both the world and the spirit is violent and physical; such words are not a passing wind but a mighty tempest.