Answer:
Sarah, Matt's wife, works as a business software developer.
Explanation:
The noun Sarah preceding the appositive Matt's wife provides sufficient identification on its own, so we have to use commas around the appositive.
These sentences are written incorrectly:
The, local market, has the freshest produce and meats in town. We don't need to use commas around the subject <em>local market</em>.
Takeko, a painting student offered to help with a sculpting demonstration.
We need to use commas around the appositive <em>a painting student</em>.
The store offers, many products, which can be personalized with your initials. No commas are needed.
Answer:
I think so
Explanation:
So, for question one, 50 people across 20 random places, this would be pretty random. A random sample is sampling from people who have the exact same probablity of getting chosen. So if all the people are random, it should be a random sample. Now for question 2, this is a random sample. If you surveyed completely random people from completely random high schools, then the entire thing is completely random. Therefore, both scearios are random samples.
Sick an be one of a synonym
D. They keep the presenter from reading the speech
*(just took test and this was correct answer)*
Personal pronouns, "I, I'm, I'll I'd" etc. must be capitalised. As for the middle of a sentence, I'm contains "I" and so therefore it is capitalised.