Answer:
He tries to get them to stop their fighting and take it to a private place. He doesn't want them to get in trouble with the prince.Explanation:
a. The cricket
b. its evening song
c. is singing
d. beneath my window
The workers will repair our street tomorrow.
The potholes on our street will be repaired soon.
Our neighbors demanded that someone repair our street.
The passive sentence is
→ The potholes on our street will be repaired soon.
This sentence uses simple future tense
✐ formula simple future
(+) O + will + be + Verb 3 (by S)
(-) O + will not / won't + be + Verb 3 (by S)
(?) will + O + be + Verb 3 (by S)?
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Subject : English
Keywords : Passive Voice, simple future
Also read the similar question
brainly.com/question/9828825
The correct answer is C. Phrase Fragment
Explanation:
A phrase or sentence fragment is a group of words in which there is missing a verb (action in the sentence) and/ or a subject (agent that carried out the action), this implies in phrase fragment the subject/ verb is missing which means the reader does not have a complete meaning of the sentence at it is fragmented. In the case of "Holding her books, her purse, and two packages" the action or verb is "holding" the complement is "her books, her purse, and two packages" but the subject is missing, thus, even when we know the person doing the action is a woman we do not exactly know who she is and her name or the pronoun she is not mention. Due to this, as the subject is missing, this is a Phrase Fragment.
Answer:
The clause in this sentence is an:
adverb clause
Explanation:
An adverb clause is the type of clause that is dependant and complements an independent clause to provide further information about it by modifying a verb or an adjective with the whole sentence. In other words, the whole dependant clause becomes an adverb to modify the verb, the adjective, or even another adverb.
This is a complex sentence which consists of a dependent or subordinate clause and an independent clause.
'If you finish your yard work' -- dependent clause
'you can take the car to the movie' -- independent clause.