This is a really bizarre set of sentences, and I think the best way of finding a correct answer is through process of elimination.
<span>My baby-sister-dropped her nearly full bottle of juice in a mud puddle. Baby-sister-dropped is wrong here.
My baby sister dropped her nearly full bottle-of juice-in a mud puddle. Both of those are wrong, those words aren't even remotely meant to be grouped together.
My baby sister dropped her nearly full-bottle of juice-in a mud puddle. Juice-in is still wrong.
My baby sister dropped her bottle of juice in a mud-puddle. This is probably correct. </span>
nope, you learn something new each day though!
Answer:
1) He gave his tacit approval in letters to the media. 2) Dean was beginning to have serious reservations about the trip and his tacit agreement to it now that it was a reality.
3)He kept his tacit knowledge at a distance from the investigators
Answer:
C'mon, Scout- after this, I'd say we could both use A TREAT.
Explanation: