Possible answers:
<em>The</em> branches swayed in the breeze.
article
The <em>branches</em> swayed in the breeze.
noun
The branches <em>swayed</em> in the breeze.
verb
The branches swayed <em>in</em> the breeze.
preposition
The branches swayed in the <em>breeze</em>.
noun
hope this helps
Larger-than-life conquests
Explanation:
relative clause
it modifies noun phrase by some grammatical tools
example
my friend who is coming from America is coming to the dinner
here who is used to indicate the noun phrase
subject verb agreement
A subject and a verb must agree, even when other words or phrases come between them.
example
The flock of geese is flying south for the winter.
The subject is flock, so the verb should be is flying.
<span>A man finds a wallet and must decide whether to return it or use the money to pay for his wife’s life-saving surgery. ... This is a moral dilemma.</span>