The conjunction in the sentence is:
- If.
- It is a subordinating conjunction.
<h3>What is a subordinating conjunction?</h3>
A subordinating conjunction is a word that is used to introduce a subordinating clause. Other examples of subordinating conjunctions are although, since, until, while.
In the sentence, the subordinating clause introduced is: the snow comes. So, "if" is right.
Learn more about subordinating conjunctions here:
brainly.com/question/521108
#SPJ1
Answer:
The answer is <em>B. might</em>.
Explanation:
First, let`s identify which conditional this is, so we`ll have to name the verb parts of these clauses:
<em>If you lead by example</em> - verb is lead and it is present simple tense.
<em>your sister might even stay in school</em> - might stay - it a modal construction that consists of a modal verb might and bare infinitive of a verb to stay
This combination is seen in the second conditional. Modals can be: would, might, can, may...
Answer A - example does not affect the sentence in any way.
Answers C and D - stay and lead - those are the verbs that have to be in these clauses. So what is needed so that this can be a conditional sentence is modal verb might.
The difference between sharks and fishes is based on their bones, skeletons, and skin texture and body shape. Key difference: Sharks are a type of fish.
It’s is good to know about the world and what going on
The contrast is news can lie or makeup stuff if your not on the right one