Answer:
The answer is B. The government builds nuclear weapons to ensure peace.
Answer: 1, 2, 4.
Explanation:
To answer this question, you must first understand what <em>parallelism </em>is. In English, we always have to keep our writing consistent and concise, and this is what parallelism is very good for. When you're writing a sentence that lists certain things, you have to keep them consistent—and this can mean listing all nouns, all verbs in the <u>same part of speech</u>, all adjectives, or all adverbs.
<u>WRONG</u> example: I like to eat, sleeping, and breathe.
<u>RIGHT</u> example: I like to eat, sleep, and breathe. or: I like eating, sleeping, and breathing.
<u>WRONG</u> example: She is tall, pretty, and confidence.
<u>RIGHT</u> example: She is tall, pretty, and confident.
Hope this helps! :)
Went
were having
fell
took
was
have visited
will leave
visited
took
was
thank(not sure.)
will send
hopes
won't be
Answer:
- demonstrated
- hit
- coached
- launched
- depreciated
- ran
- stretched
- jumped
- comforted
- identified
- sang
Explanation:
- No other verb fits well within this sentence.
- Baseball players have bats so they <em>hit</em> the ball over the fence. None of the other verbs made sense with this sentence.
I could keep going, but instead I advice you to use context clues to determine which verb is correct. You can also just use process of elimination by inserting random verbs into the sentence, reading it aloud, and crossing out each incorrect or abnormal sounding verb until you reach one that suits the sentence.
Answer:
Explanation:
It informs the reader that the text will focus on a specific school.