<em>This is like a story plus a claim following your requests. Hope it helps you, though.</em>
<h3>We call the meeting to order

11:42 AM</h3>
This is the case-claim of the missing french fries. It happened last Sunday, when I made a claim that I witnessed frozen french fries being stolen by a group of people at a store. The store retrieved the fries on Wednesday <em>today</em>. Thankfully, they were not damaged. Still in good condition, still edible. "What evidence is there"? Good question, I saw it at the store and recorded it. I presented the recording, and all is well that ends well!
<em>This claim is not based on an actual case. This is fictional, and any relation to an actual person is purely coincedential.</em>
Answer:
This depends.
Explanation:
This could be an opinion question. The answer could be based off of who you relate to the most and therefore like the most, or who you don't relate to and don't like.
What characters in the book are nice, funny, kind, etc? These are things that likable people have.
What characters are mean, rude, short-tempered, etc? These are things unlikable people have.
Answer:
theres plenty of things it could mean!
Explanation:
he could just feel comfy with you, i mean come on, your profile is based off of bubbles from powerpuff girls, you seem pretty comforting to me. he might not be social but he still could find comfort and/or safety when being by you. thats what i would think anyways. try and get closer with him (if youre comfortable with that) and try and see if it helps you understand the situation any better! i hope this helps haha
Among the two sentences given, the first sentence used the modifier correctly in order to clearly describe the words it is intended. The sentence, "I saw the car, that had passed us, screech to a halt at the red light." The modifier in this sentence is the phrase, "that had passed us". This phrase describes the word "car".