I think it’s D, because “foreign exchange risk” does not say anything about the MNC, and a fixed exchange rate doesn’t cause that much of a problem. I might be terribly wrong.
If the underlined phrase is <em>born in New York in 1856, </em>then that would be a participial phrase, which often functions as an adjective in a sentence, like is the case here.
Gerund is always used as a noun, and infinitive has the form <em>to + verb </em>(to go, to be...)
Light isn't always easy to find. Tough times can either make us or break us, but we exist in the in-between for the longest part of the journey
PLEASE GIVE ME BRAINLIEST
Answer:
your answer is Option A hope ur help and mark me brainlist
Answer: It's C
The sentence that has a dangling modifier error is the following one: After seeing a movie about overflowing landfills, a new program for recycling was started in our town. The modifier used at the beginning of this sentence should be modifying the speaker of the sentence as the ones who watched the movie about overflowing landfills.