Answer:
The sentence that is grammatically correct is: Tess’ revisions to the report increased its readability significantly.
Explanation:
The fourth/last option (sentence) is correct because an apostrophe is required after the noun (Tess) to indicate that the noun (Tess) is possessive; in addition, the word "its" is appropriate, and not in a contracted form—it's—which represents "it is".
Answer:
so, I'm not exactly sure what you need help with, so I'm just gonna assume that you want us to explain what the comment means.
basically they're saying that they were from a different country or they followed a certain religion, and people were telling them that people like them (who come from their country/follow their religion) shouldn't be in the country that they were in. Maybe because of like terrorist attacks from that country, or maybe they were in a war. Kinda of like how the Japanese were treated during World War 2.
Explanation:
Answer:
... with a compound sentence, there are two simple (independent) sentences connected together with a coordinating conjunction, whereas with a compound-complex sentence, there are NOT ONLY two simple sentences connected together as described, BUT there ALSO is a dependent clause included in the mix.
Explanation:
Ex:
compound =
I will get married to a beautiful woman, and we will have three children.
compound-complex:
After I graduate from high school, I will get married to a beautiful woman, and we will have three children.
I should be a comma after "not" I believe.
Answer:
human being, a culture-bearing primate classified in the genus Homo, especially the species H. sapiens. Human beings are anatomically similar and related to the great apes but are distinguished by a more highly developed brain and a resultant capacity for articulate speech and abstract reasoning
Explanation: