The answer is A. He was excited and asked if there was a famous baseball player in the family.
Answer:
girl 1: " Hey (girl 2's name), do you want to meet up at the park tomorrow?"
girl 2: " I will have to ask my parents but, isnt it a bit risky?"
girl 1: " nooo it will be fine!!"
girl 2: " my parents said yes as long as we maintain social distancing, to keep us safe just incase."
girl 1: " sure thing! Would you like to come over to mine after that too, maybe in the garden?"
girl 2: " yup! as long as we are maintaning social distancing and i bring some hand sanitiser, sure!"
<h2><em><u>
MAINTAIN SOCIAL DISTANCING AND KEEP WASHING YOUR HANDS!!!</u></em></h2><h2><em><u>
STAY SAFE!!</u></em></h2>
Answer:
A
Explanation:
Red herring. This fallacy blames something entirely irrelevant on the cause of something else. E.G. This happened and so did that. Therefore, this caused that.
Both C and D have to do with attacking arguments or people, E is simply aggrandizement, and B is coming to an illogical conclusion.
The sentence that uses preposition correctly is;
"The school bus finally arrived at the museum".
"at" is the preposition and "at the museum" is the prepositional phrase.
<h2>Further Explanation;
</h2><h3>Preposition
</h3>
- Prepositions are words that connects pronouns, nouns, or phrases with other words in a sentence. They are words that appear before a direct object or an indirect object.
- Prepositions act to connect objects, time, locations and directions of a given sentence. They are normally short words that are followed by a noun or a pronoun.
- Examples of prepositions include; since, at, before, after, besides, under, over, into, in, etc.
<h3>Preposition phrases
</h3>
- They are phrases that contain a preposition as the head, an object or a noun and a modifier.
- Examples of preposition phrase; at the museum in the sentence, “The school bus finally arrived at the museum”.
- Prepositions introduce the object of a prepositional phrase. In the case, “at” is the preposition, and “the museum” is the subject of the preposition.
<h3>Functions of preposition
</h3>
Preposition may perform the following functions
- Act as an adjective modifying a noun
- Act as a verb modifying a verb
- They also act as particles in phrasal verb. For example in; wake up, pass out, look up, etc
- etc
Key words: Preposition, preposition phrases, Uses of preposition phrases
<h3>Learn more about </h3>
Level: High school
Subject: English
Topic: Parts of speech
Sub-topic: Preposition