<h2><u>
PLEASE MARK BRAINLIEST!</u></h2>
Answer:
The person above is wrong! The correct answer is...
Explanation:
<h3>B) Thinking about the people who had been arrested and Anne's writings</h3>
<h3 />
These are the people who agree with me and what they said about the incorrect answer above:
<u>Amaninoel777</u> - Its wrong the answer is b thinking about people who had been arrested and Anne’s was writings
<u>gracerebeccagosser33</u> - yea the answers b
<u>gracerebeccagosser33</u> - its ok thx for trying!
I hope this helps!
- sincerelynini
Answer:
The beaches I visited in Aruba had the same clear turquoise water that I had seen in the brochures.
Explanation:
<u>A relative clause, or adjective clause, is a group words that has a subject and a verb. It functions like an adjective would, offering information about a noun in the sentence. This type of clause starts with a relative pronoun or a relative adverb (who, whom, that, which, when, etc.)</u>
When we have two sentences that mention the same thing or person, we can often change one of the sentences into a relative clause. To do so, we add the relative pronoun and drop anything that is repetitive. Let's do that to the sentences that were provided in the question:
1. The beaches I visited in Aruba had clear turquoise water.
2. I'd seen the same clear turquoise water in the brochures.
Combined sentence: The beaches I visited in Aruba had <u>the same clear turquoise water</u> that I had seen in the brochures.
We did not need to repeat "clear turquoise water." We combined the sentences by transforming sentence 2 into a relative clause.
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The complete predicate in this sentence is A. mopped his brow, exhaled sharply, and picked up his phone.
B and C aren't correct, because they aren't complete predicates - something is missing.
D isn't correct, because <em>looking up from his computer monitor </em>is not a predicate, it is an adverb phrase.