The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "developed art of story telling." <span>Mark Twain developed the art of story telling, and that was his greatest contribution to the history of the novel. This contribution of Mark Twain is commonly used until today.</span>
Answer:What I was doing a little better than I expected
Explanation:
k
Answer:
The = AR
camp = ADJ
readily = ADV
her = ADJ
swimming = ADJ
Explanation:
<u>An article is a word that defines a noun, making it specific or not specific. In the sentence, we have the article "the", which makes the noun "counselor" specific.</u>
<u>An adverb is a word that modifies an adjective, a verb, or another adverb. In the sentence, the adverb is "readily", modifying the verb "gave".</u>
<u>An adjective is a word that modifies a noun. In the sentence, we have "camp" functioning as an adjective, modifying the noun "counselor". We also have the possessive adjective "her" and the adjective "swimming" modifying the noun "lessons".</u>
The question asked us to label prepositional phrases and pronouns as well. This sentence does not have any prepositional phrases, which consist of prepositions and their complements. This sentence does not have any pronouns either. <u>NOTE: you might be tempted to think of "her" as a pronoun, but it accompanies and modifies a noun. Therefore, it is an adjective.</u>
Answer:
Relative.
Explanation:
The fifth type of pronoun in the English language is the relative pronoun. Relative pronouns are a type of subordinating conjunction that introduce adjective, or relative, clauses. Some relative pronouns are technically relative adverbs. Relative pronouns express number in English. The English relative pronouns are:
* it distracts the individual
* some music can put an individual to sleep
* various music expresses various meanings and an emotional song can trigger unwanted feelings and the students can either express their feelings right there during the test. Some cry, laugh or get angry at the unwanted memories or feelings