<h2>Answer</h2>
Morphology
<h2>Explanation </h2>
Morphology is the study of word structure, how they form, and their relationships in a given language. Morphology tell us that words are made of smaller units called morphemes. A morpheme according to Zelig Harris is "Every sequence of phonemes which has meaning and which is not composed of smaller sequence having meaning, is a morpheme."
Morphemes combine hierarchically to form words; we usually use morphology threes to study the combination of morphemes into words.
The given sentence is an example of a complex sentence.
Explanation:
Complex sentences are sentences that contain an independent clause and at least one dependent clause. The sentence <em>When Sara turned her homework in, she forgot to put her name on it</em> can be divided into two clauses:
- Independent clause - <em>She forgot to put her name on it.</em>
- Dependent clause - <em>When Sara turned her homework in.</em>
Conjoined (compound) sentences contain two or more independent clauses connected by coordinating conjunctions (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so). For example:<em> They borrowed books from the library but didn’t read them.</em>
A simple sentence is a sentence consisting of only one independent clause. For example: She likes to read.
Learn more about sentences here: brainly.com/question/647573
#LearnWithBrainly
The correct answer is D :)
Hope I helped!
"Jerry feels pressure to prove himself to the locals in the foreign place so that he might fit in" (B)