The preposition in question is "on", and its purpose is to show you where the dog chewed. You can remove the preposition to form the sentence "The brown dog chewed the rawhide bone." You can also rearrange it to find the preposition, "on the rawhide bone, the dog chewed" in what is commonly known as the Yoda technique.
Answer: is 65292
1.Three pairs of digit sum up to 11
So.5+6,4+7,3+8,2+9
So, password must consist of 2 to 9 numbers to make a pair 11.
No 0 or 1.
2.Also it has only 5 digit. So any two number must be same.
3. as per other condition.. 1st and last digit can't be same and also 3 middle digits can't have 2 same number.
4. Last and first digit can be
6___2
9___3
No other options suit for three times the last digit.
5. For middle numbers..
_529_ is the only option and 2 is a repeator that can make third pair as sum of 11.
_63(11)_ error and also 6 is a repeator but it can't make sum as 11.. Anyway error case.
_74(12)_error also no repeators
So.. Now from step 4 and 5..
65292 is the password.
Answer:
this is not my answer, it's cohee326 :D
Explanation:
“heated” as in “mad”.
“chill” as in “relax”.
“in a minute” as in “a while”.
“frontin’” as in “bragging”.
“cushy” as in “easy”.
“slacker” as in “lazy”.
“job hunting” as in “looking for a job”. “too wired” as in “too energetic”.
“spent” as in “exhausted”.
make sure to write these in complete
sentences.
Answer: Possessive nouns have function as adjectives
Explanation:
Possessive nouns are showing ownership and they have an apostrophe or ''s'', or both. For example: Today's weather, Mary's book, Dog's food, Owls' eyes.
Because of that, they function as adjectives but they are still possessive nouns.
''I can't find Mary's book.''
<em>Mary's</em> is a possessive noun ( because it's telling us that the book is Mary's) and <em>Mary's</em> is functioning as an adjective and modifying the noun <em>book</em>.
Examples for possessive adjectives: This is <u><em>our</em></u> house.
Hey, that's <em><u>my</u></em> phone.
Possessive adjectives list: your, my, his, her, its, our, their. Possessive adjectives can replace noun to show ownership of something.
You would use "he" here because at a later part we encounter "he can graduate" which shows that the doer of the action is a male and therefore requires "he" to be used.