The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Here we have a statement, not a question. It seems that you forgot to include the question.
However, in order to help you, we can say the following.
The act of giving instruction or important information can be understood as an order. To give orders with good grammar, you use the imperative mode
If you are referring to the proper way to give instructions as a leader or in the corporate world, you need to do it properly, respectfully, but in an energetic way to express authority. It is a command, expressed with respect, but a command that needs to be obeyed.
Answer: D (sentence 2)
Explanation: all the other sentences are mainly talking about the origins/cultivations of pomegranates, sentence 2 is the only one not related to that
Answer:A
Explanation: “wags” and “panted” have a different tense
D. Possessive.
Howard's apostrophe means that it is his, therefore possesive.
It would be a subordinate cause, for it can't stand on its own. Think about it: Since early this morning. What happened since early morning? Since it doesn't provide that information, it wouldn't be able to be an independent cause.
Also, I don't believe that the sentence is grammatically correct :)