1 Practice makes perfect.
2 Friends are always there to support one another.
3 Peer pressure can sometimes be a good thing.
4 It is important to try something new before deciding against it.
Answer:
I believe it is the third answer
Explanation:
B. "Let Me Not to the Marriage of True Minds"
C. "Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day?"
D. "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud"
The answer to your question would be that the statement about the sentence that is true is the following one: The sentence needs commas because the partipial phrase is nonessential. That is, the correct option would be B.
Participial phrases can either be essential or nonessential depending on the type of information they add to the sentence. A participial phrase is essential when the information it provides is essential to the meaning of the sentence and therefore no commas are used. If the essential participial phrase was removed, the meaning of the sentence would be altered. On the other hand, participial phrases are nonessential when they provide nonessential information to the sentence. They are set off with commas and can be removed from the sentence without altering its meaning.
Answer:
him; direct object
Explanation:
i want you to trust me when i say that this is the correct answer. i took the unit test with this question and c was the right answer.
B. the device of mistaken identity.
C. revealing great heroes as common fools.
D. an unusual use of Middle English.
Answer: B. the device of mistaken identity.
Explanation: 7.2 in Shakespeare’s work bottom section.
In his comedies, Shakespeare often employs two interesting devices:
* Mistaken identity. Either characters aren’t what they seem to be (appearing in disguise), or they mistake the identity of others (due to a spell, for example, as you’ll see in A Midsummer Night’s Dream).
* Fool or clown. This character may seem silly or mischievous, but he’s often wiser than some of the more respectable characters in the play.
b. a town square where people could openly voice their complaints against the government
c. a device that was attached to a radio to get a better signal
d. a style of dancing during the 1920s