Hello everyone it's been a while, I hope you all are well and good just like I am. My office work past months has been kind of hectic due to extra shifts that I have been working on, but it all was finally worth everything. Thus, I would like to share the amazing news with you all that I have been promoted plus been awarded with incentives due to my good work.
After working for a lot of late hours my body and mind is now completely exhausted, and I thought of a vacation spot that could help to lift my spirit up. Visiting Bali has been on my mind since a long time and I can't wait to explore the beautiful lands.
I would be coming back home after the vacations to meet you all, Until then take care of yourselves and I also will make sure to take care of myself as well.
To know more about Vacation spot refer to the link below
brainly.com/question/7905262
#SPJ4
Answer:
1
In what form can we see water in the atmosphere?
In the atmosphere, water exists as a gas (water vapor from evaporation), as a liquid (droplets of rain and liquid water that coats solid particles), and as a solid (snow and ice).
2
gas or liguid
3
snow and ice.
Explanation:
Answer:
Pronoun
Explanation:
<u>In the sentence - </u><u>This is a big mess.</u><u> - </u><u>'this' </u><u>is used as a pronoun, to be exact </u><u>a demonstrative pronoun. </u>
A demonstrative pronoun is a pronoun that is used to point at something specific within a sentence. It can be items in space or time.
These pronouns are This, That (for singular), These and Those (for plural).
This / These are used for singular items that are nearby. That / Those are used for multiple items that are not near us.
<u>Examples:</u>
This is my cat. - we can point at it, the cat is near us.
That is a plane. - the plane is not near us, so we use 'that'.
These are my favorite toys. - we point at many toys, and they are near us.
Those are my classmates. - we point at the classmates, they are not near.
Why 'this' is not a determiner in the sentence - This is a big mess.
A determiner is a word that introduces a noun. <u>It always comes before a noun, not after or without a noun near!</u>
<u>This car</u> is bad.
<u>These pies</u> look delicious.
I hope it helped you :)
Answer: The answer is HAVE. The boys have eaten every cupcake I bake.
Explanation: