Answer:
ummm...
Explanation:
think I really don't think this is english....sorry
One opinion says that hunting was invented by the people who lived
back at the beginning of people. I think it goes back even farther than
that.
Every living thing that can move around goes hunting for things to eat,
and there were a huge number of living things that could move around,
long before people came along. Like dinosaurs, bats, cockroaches etc.
So I don't think you can say that hunting was ever invented. It was just
something that living things just naturally always did, like breathing.
<span>Before the bridegroom marries Subha, he visits her at her parents' home to inspect her. Her parents (especially her mother) show her off, and the bridegroom (and his friend) approve.
</span><span>The bridegroom came with a friend to inspect the bride. Her parents were dizzy with anxiety and fear when they saw the god arrive to select the beast for his sacrifice. Behind the stage, the mother called her instructions aloud, and increased her daughter's weeping twofold, before she sent her into the examiner's presence.</span>
A nonrestrictive modifier adds information that is not essential for the reader to understand the sentence. In case the nonrestrictive modifier is eliminated, the meaning would remain the same. Only nonrestrictive modifiers are separated by commas. Taking this into account, the sentences that contain correctly punctuated nonrestrictive modifiers are:
- My oldest sister, Maria, is a pilot - If we remove <em>Maria</em>, we can still identify which sister we are talking about.
- My two best friends, Tory and Monica, met me at the movies - If we remove <em>Tory and Monica</em>, we can still identify which two people we are referring to.
- Bulldogs, which I love, are the cutest! - If we remove <em>which I love</em>, we can still identify which dogs we are talking about.