Nominative
pronouns are type of nouns used as the subject of a sentence or a clause.
<span>A
pronoun is used to substitute a noun. In order for it to substitute, it must
have a clear antecedent. Personal pronouns are used to substitute nouns with
ownership. There are three persons point of view.1st person is when
the subject is the one who is speaking (e.g. I, me, my, mine, we, us, our, ours). 2nd person is
when the subject is the one being spoken to (you, your, yours). 3rd person is when the subject is
the one spoken about (he, him, his,
she, her, hers, it, its, they, their, theirs).
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<span> </span>
Dee wants<span> the old </span>quilts<span> for several reasons but mainly because she </span>wants<span> to display them as part of her "heritage" in her home in the city. She </span>does<span> not believe that they are appreciated in the country with </span>Maggie<span> and Mama because they actually use the </span><span>quilts</span>
Answer:
Independent clause: I walked
Dependent clause: a mile before school.
Explanation:
Independent clauses form a sentence on their own, dependent clauses do not.
<span>The correct answer is that the guard was talking to himself, he was contemplating his decision of going to Creon, who can punish him.
He didn't address his words to anyone in particular, but was rather thinking out loud so as to see whether he should go and see his lord who is definitely going to punish him for his mistake, or not go to him, and keep his mistake a secret from Creon.
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