Sentence three is the correct sentence. All of the others have some grammatical error in them. In the first, "felled" is incorrect and not a word. It also says "walk boots" instead of the correct verbal adjective "walking boots." In the second, "weren't" is not usually considered very academic and "tight" should be in the adverb form "tightly." Number four is wrong because it used "walked boots" instead of of "walking boots" and "tight" instead of "tightly." "Fallen" is incorrect in number 4, because it should have been "had fallen" if one was going to use the verb "fallen."
typically you would need between two to five main points. If you have only one point in your speech that would be listed as too short -
hope this helped you, good luck in your future studies :)
-a
Answer:
them: I folded them neatly and put them in my drawer.
It: It still looked pretty and new.
Explanation:
The pronoun them might refer to more than one antecedent:
"I found receipts in a few of my jeans. I folded them neatly and put them in my drawer." (The pronoun them might refer to <em>receipts</em> and <em>jeans</em>.)
The pronoun It also might refer to more than one antecedent:
"I found an old box decorated with ribbons and a pink bow. It still looked pretty and new." (The pronoun It might refer to a <em>box </em>and <em>bow.</em>)
So these two pronouns in the paragraph have unclear antecedents.
Tense tones are usually used.
Answer:
gen·er·al·i·za·tion
/ˌjen(ə)rələˈzāSH(ə)n/
Learn to pronounce
noun
noun: generalization; plural noun: generalizations; noun: generalisation; plural noun: generalisations
a general statement or concept obtained by inference from specific cases.
Explanation:
Hope this helps
-A Helping Friend (mark brainliest pls)