The given clause, "whoever wins the contest a savings bond" is a subordinate or a dependent clause. This kind of clause does not convey a complete thought and needs the main sentence in order to make it understandable. This subordinate clause is connected to the main clause with the subordinating conjunction "whoever".
No, it is not a correct sentence.
The mistake is in the word <em />worse - you need to use the superlative (final) form of the adjective. Bad - worse - worst. So the correct answer would actually be:
Deciding to go to Barcelona was the worst decision I ever made.
The detail from "In Another Country" by Ernest Hemingway that is an example of understatement is: C. "The doctor went to his office in a back room and brought a photograph which showed a hand that had been withered almost as small as the major’s, before it had taken a machine course, and after was a little larger."
<h3>What is an Understatement?</h3>
An understatement is a speech that has little import compared to the real meaning. This means that the author does not fully convey the gravity of the words.
In sentence C, the content of the picture was hard to bear but this was not fully highlighted by the speaker's choice of words.
Learn more about an understatement here:
brainly.com/question/11345195
In my opinion, the correct answer is <span>B) for Halloween // is decorated</span>. Adverb phrases are extended adverbs or phrases that function like adverbs, modifying the sentences' predicates. They tell us how, when, where, why the verb action is performed. In this case, the predicate is is decorated. We can ask the mental question: why or what for is the house decorated? The answer to this question would be for Halloween. And that is our adverb phrase. It shouldn't be confused with an adjective phrase "down the street", which describes the subject "the house".
Cast out because you are exiling them away and to you would be casting them out