"Unwanted clothing dumped in the bin ends up up along with the rest of your rubbish." "It's a waste to not pass your unwanted clothes to charity" "Most charities have shops in your local high street" "Charities can post collection bags and make door to door collections for your unwanted items" "Clothes that are too worn to be sold can be shredded and reprocessed into new items" are all facts.
The answer is a, bachelors degree
his hand dangling from the cookie jar - absolute phrase
This phrase describe the entire clause "Charles looked guilty", so it is considered and absolute phrase. An absolute phrase also had a noun and participle; the noun is hand, the participle is dangling.
the team's captain - appositive phrase, adjective phrase
This phrase clarifies that the quarterback is the team captain. An appositive phrase functions as an adjective phrase because it describes a specific noun.
Her confidence shaken - absolute phrase
This phrase contains a noun (confidence) and participle (shaken). It also describes the entire clause "Sheryl spelled the word again". These are the conditions for an absolute phrase.
the editor of the school paper - appositive phrase, adjective phrase
This phrase clarifies or renames Charlotte as the editor of the school paper.
Answer:
She used a computer to learn a whole new language?
Explanation:
This is unclear, but the best answer i can think of would be structure.