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The underlined word "though" is the subordinating conjunction in the sentence. It shows the contrast between the importance of experience and talent and the expectation of other qualities.
No, the sentence "Do you go to school, Shania?" is punctuated correctly with a question mark after "school" and a comma between "school" and "Shania" to separate the direct address.
Yes, the pronouns "him" and "her" are used correctly in the sentence "you sat between him and her during the sales conference." "Him" is the correct object form of the pronoun, and "her" is the correct object form as well.
Just make sure it makes sense within the sentence.I.E."I parked between the two cars."
Yes, the pronouns are correct: you, subject of the sentence (the pronoun 'you' can function as both a subject and an object in a sentence)him and her, compound object of the preposition 'between' (both 'him' and 'her' are object pronouns)
No, the personal pronoun 'I' is the subjective form. The objective form is 'me'In the noun phrase, 'Just between you and me', the pronouns 'you and me' are the object of the preposition 'between'. Use the objective form 'me'.
The "underlined" less than sign is actually a sign meaning "less than or equal to" and it is the equal to part which looks like an underline.
The word "but" functions as a coordinating conjunction in the sentence. It connects two independent clauses and shows a contrast between the boy being a child and still being able to do so much for others.
It is 10 to the power of the_number_of_digits_between_the_4s_(excluding_the_4s_themselves)_plus_one; if the underlined 4 is to the right of the non-underlined 4, then make this count negative.eg, if the number is 1234564, then there are 2 digits between them (the 5 and 6), so the power is 2 + 1 = 3; then:If the first 4 is underlined it is 103 = 1000 times greater than the non-underlined 4If the second 4 is underlined it is 10-3 = 0.001 (= 1/1000) times greater than the non-underlined 4
No, the pronouns are not used correctly in the sentence. It should be "between him and you" instead of "between he and you" because "him" is the object pronoun and should be used after a preposition like "between."
The easiest way to identify and differentiate between an adjective phrase and adverbial phrase is: Whenever<u>,</u> A preposition is with a noun or pronoun or has relation to such that it modifies the noun and pronoun It is an **adjective phrase.** For example: He stood between his mother and his father. Here the underlined word is an adjective phrase as it has a relation to the subject (He) and modifying him All the other prepositional phrases are adverbial phrase As they modify the verb, an adverb or an adjective. For example: Draw a line under each word you don't know. Here underlined word is adverbial phrase (as there is no relation between the underlined word and the subject)
Anecdote is used correctly but there is a mismatch between "a company" and "avert" - probably in the tense.