He could not be allowed out of the attic at all
Based on the definition of appositive, this is a noun or noun phrase that is used to rename the another noun beside it. Basing on the given sentence above, I believe that it does not have an appositive. The nouns are Joe and Tulips, but no other noun that renames either of the two.
Hope this helps bro.
Answer:
“With one boy in particular my mother had to sit me down and explain.”
Explanation:
Perhaps this one “boy” doesn’t want to be a boy anymore and gets offended when the main character refers to them as a “guy” or was never a guy to begin with. In that case it would make sense that the boy would get offended
Answer:
Objective:
The store opens at 8:00.
He is six feet tall.
We walked down the road.
Subjective:
They should cancel the game.
I think skiing is fun.
Red is the prettiest color.
The sentence which is the most objective is <span>A. My mother taught Italian lessons at the community center.
</span>It is a fact, therefore it is objective. The other sentences are somebody's opinions - stupid sisters, crazy Greek family, a real pain - these words show that it is someone's opinion, which is subjective, not objective.