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ser-zykov [4K]
3 years ago
7

Identify the appositive or complete appositive phrase.

English
1 answer:
In-s [12.5K]3 years ago
8 0
An appositive<span> is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun right beside it. Typically, appositives are enclosed with commas since these just serve as an additional information. Based on the given sentence above, the complete appositive phrase would be "</span><span>a small two-door model". The answer would be the third option. </span>
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I don't get what this is saying...

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unabashed \ ən-ə-basht\ adjective 1. Not embarrassed, disconcerted, or ashamed. Middle English unabaiste, from un-+ abaiste, pas
Reil [10]

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The answer is C

Explanation:

Because just took the quiz

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2 years ago
Select the correct texts in the passage.
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The wonders of the Grand Canyon cannot be adequately represented in symbols of speech, nor by speech itself

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and The

elements that unite to make the Grand Canyon the most sublime spectacle in nature are many and exceedingly diverse.

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Read 2 more answers
Indicating your feelings and thoughts before siva opened Krishna's school report​
Luden [163]

Answer:

One of my favorite stories from Hinduism comes from the Bhagavata Purana, on the childhood of Krishna:

….One day when Rama and the other little sons of the cowherds were playing, they reported to his mother, “Krishna has eaten dirt.” Yasoda took Krishna by the hand and scolded him, for his own good, and she said to him, seeing that his eyes were bewildered with fear, “Naughty boy, why have you secretly eaten dirt?” Krishna said, “Mother, I have not eaten. They are all lying. If you think they speak the truth, look at my mouth yourself” “If that is the case, then open your mouth,” she said to the Lord Hari [Vishnu], the God of unchallenged sovereignty who had in sport taken the form of a human child, and He opened his mouth.

She then saw in his mouth the whole eternal universe, and heaven, and the regions of the sky, and the orbit of the earth with its mountains, islands, and oceans; she saw the wind, and lightning, and the moon and stars, and the zodiac; and water and fire and air and space itself; she saw the vacillating senses, the mind, the elements, and the three strands of matter. She saw within the body of her son, in his gaping mouth, the whole universe in all its variety, with all the forms of life and time and nature and action and hopes, and her own village, and herself. Then she became afraid and confused, thinking, “Is this a dream, or an illusion wrought by a god? Or is it a delusion of my own perception? Or is it some portent of the natural powers of this little boy, my son? I bow down to the feet of the god, whose nature cannot be imagined or grasped by mind, heart, acts, or speech; he in whom all of this universe is inherent, impossible to fathom. The god is my refuge, he through whose power of delusion there arise in me such false beliefs as “I”, “This is my husband”, “This is my son”, “I am the wife of the village chieftain and all his wealth is mine, including these cow-herds and their wives and their wealth of cattle.”

When the cow-herd’s wife had come to understand the true essence in this way, the lord spread his magic illusion in the form of maternal affection. Instantly the cow-herd’s wife lost her memory of what had occurred and took her son on her lap.

Translator Wendy Doniger also notes that this story “is a motif based upon a much earlier myth from the Mahabarata [3.183-190, and the Matsya 167]: the sage Markandeya was floating in the cosmic ocean after the dissolution of the universe, when he came upon a young boy sleeping under a banyan tree. He entered the mouth of the boy—who was Vishnu—and saw within him the entire universe, whereupon he came back out of Vishnu’s mouth.”

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Describe Mrs. Hutchinson's
joja [24]

Answer:

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Explanation:

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