When we say complete subject, this is what is being talked about in the sentence including its modifiers, and the complete predicate includes the main verb and its modifiers as well. In the given sentence above, the complete subject would be "He" and the complete predicate would be "<span>had no help with the project." Hope this helps.</span>
Strength is the answer ;)
_award brainliest if helped!
1. within
2. off
3. in, in
4. on
5. in, at
6. in
7. on
8. on
9. on
10. on , at
11. on
12. within
B.
These gift bags are for: Mrs. Hernandez, Mr. Rollins, and Miss Crane.
A colon NEVER comes after a fragment, only after a complete clause.
Answer:
Under the astonished, wide-eyed moon, with the fires casting strange shadows upon these towering figures, I am rather inclined to believe him.
Explanation:
Unlike the second to last sentence (right before the above written), this sentence gives the moon traits that a person would have. The second to last sentence (the one with "They walk") only <em>tells</em> the personification rather than <em>shows</em>.