"<span>c. "Have you ever seen a shooting star?" asked Terry." is the only sentence that is punctuated correctly, since the question mark must go inside quotations in this case. </span>
Answer:
You need to make eye contact, participate, and don't make distracting noises.
Explanation:
These are just ideas, not the whole thing.
Answer:
Through the character of Esperanza, Cisneros writes about the ghosts that haunted her. She writes using imagery, personification and other literary devices.
Explanation:
(you're going to have to look through the text to find the second part)
Question 2
Answer: Across the bay, fleets of old fishing boats was seen on the horizon.
Explanation: The subject <em>fleets</em> (plural noun) <em>of old fishing boats </em>mismatches the verb <em>was seen </em>(only for I/he/she/it)
Question 5
Answer: John cried.
Explanation: This sentence is the only one with a subject and a predicate. "Because he wasn't hungry" is a reason clause that must depend on another sentence. "Rebekah drove a race car she won three races" is not a valid sentence unless you place a semicolon after the word "car" to separate the two predicates in it (or a period to make two separate sentences).
Question 10
Answer: I studied
Explanation: The subject "I" is not properly divided from the verb (studied), complement (for the test) and the independent clause joined by the word "but" (but I still didn't pass it).
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