Answer:
There was a story I used to read where a woman had her hands and feet dangling off the bed while she was asleep in her bedroom with her door shut. She woke up in the middle of the night to her dog licking her hand and dozed back off. She then woke up in the morning to find her dog scratching on her door trying to be let in. The dog wasn't in her room all night, he was shut out. This scared me as a kid because that meant something else was under her bed licking her hand. This influenced me to keep all my limbs on my bed at all times, and sometimes I would even keep them all tucked away under my blankets to be extra safe.
Explanation:
1.)a star
2.)hydrogen and helium
3.)a star at the center of our solar system
4.)the sun
Answer:
A star at the center of our solar system.
Explanation:
An appositive is a noun or a noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it. It can be short or long.
On this case, the appositive is nonessential because its surrounded by commas, separated from the rest of the sentence. It interrupts the sentence.
If the information given in the appositive is essential to the sentence´s meaning is called Appositive restrictive and commas are no longer used for these cases.
I hope this answer helps you.
In the presented sentence, the appositive phrase is 'a star at the center of our solar system', as it provides extra information about 'The sun'.
In the sentence, 'The sun, a star at the center of our solar system, is made mostly of hydrogen and helium.' the appositive phase is 'a star at the center of our solar system'. An appositive phrase can always be identified as a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it. Here, 'a star at the center of our solar system' provides additional information about the noun 'The sun', thus it is an appositive.
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Now let’s look at some metaphors. The poet compares himself to an inanimate object— a cloud drifting aimlessly over the ground. At the same time, he gives the inanimate daffodils human attributes—they dance, they nod their heads, and they’re jolly. Giving human attributes to nonhuman objects is called personification.By using these two comparisons, the poet blurs the distinction between himself and nature
The question you asking is The cell phone..... Danced.