That really depends on the scene. Can you edit your question and then send a message to be to answer it? I could maybe see an attachment and or you could type the stanza you're having trouble with, and I could take a look at it for you. Send a message to me. Hope I helped a little! Bye!
I don't need a dictionary. There are TWO acceptable options:
beefs and beeves
In English, we typically refer to the plural of beef like this ....
I tasted two types of beef, but I didn't like either one.
I'd say it would be the table to the right
<span>1) The word family in this sentence is the subject of the sentence and therefore is a noun. It answers the question -who produced?
2) but is a conjunction in this sentence. A conjunctions joins two words.
3) Her is a pronoun. It stands in the place of a noun- Charlotte. A word used to denote a noun is a pronoun.
4) Poems is a noun. Poems is the object of the verb collected and objects are nouns.</span>
Answer:
the given analogy can be referred to the sub-heading-main heading analogy. in the given example, cave is a smaller section of a cavern and a song is a smaller part of a tune. therefore, one is the bigger part and the other is the smaller part.
Explanation: