Answer:
im not trying to take points
Explanation:
i was wondering if you had answered my question. it was a precalculus pdf
if you are done could you send it to azarepollo "at" gm ail
Answer:
"Today's medical students owe a debt to Dr. Henry Gray"
Explanation:
An independent clause is a part of a sentence that can stand alone and still be a complete sentence. A complete sentence has a subject and a verb.
In the problem, the independent clause is "Today's medical students owe a debt to Dr. Henry Gray". This is because we can take this section of the sentence out of the original and it can still make sense by itself since it has the subject ("students") and the verb ("owe").
The other part of the sentence is a dependent clause because it cannot stand alone: while it does have a verb "is", it does not have a main subject to go with that verb.
Hope this helps!
An intransitive verb is an action verb<span>, expressing a doable activity like </span>arrive<span>, </span>go<span>, </span>lie<span>, </span>sneeze<span>, </span>sit<span>, </span>die<span>, etc. Unlike a </span>transitive verb<span>, it will </span>not<span> have a </span>direct object<span> receiving the action. Did and Attend are both words who are likely to have a direct object receiving the action; therefore they are likely transitive.</span>
The correct answer is one main clause.
This means that there is only one verb in the sentence, which in this case is the verb 'was.' Even though drive is also a verb, in this context it is used as an adjective driven (participle form of the verb to drive) and is thus not considered to be a verb. This means that there are no subordinate clauses but rather just one main clause.