The tone you’d most likely use is an engaging/exciting, educational tone if that makes sense. You’d want to use an exciting tone that also has a dramatic tone to it. I’m pretty sure you underline the word “on” in the sentence including “on his return home." Sorry if I’m not correct, I’ve never done this exact question.
<span>What is one way to analyze a writer’s sentence structure?
</span><span>-language registers,
-literary devices,
-figures of speech.</span>
The correct answer is A. <span>My favorite stores are Bloomingdale's and Macy's. My sister only shops at Nordstrom.
The names of the shops are Bloomingdale's, and Macy's - both of these shops have the apostrophe and then -s in their actual name, so these cannot be omitted. The third shop doesn't have an apostrophe and -s: its name is just Nordstrom. This is why the other options are incorrect.
</span>
Answer:
The answer is B because the text says "teaching rating is close to zero"
A phrase is a group of words, without a subject or a verb, that functions in a sentence as a single part of speech. ... A prepositional phrase is a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with a noun or a pronoun. This noun or pronoun is called the “object of the preposition