Answer:
1. Poker faced dude in a building eating a doughnut, back facing a bunch of people holding protestor-cards.
2. A woman holding a sweater for a dude whose hands are up.
3. A sketch of the building but with 102 floors.
Explanation:
That's all i could come up with
Answer:
1. a possessive pronoun used as an adjective. - A. possessive adjectives
Possessive adjectives are for example "my", "yours" or "theirs", they are used to indicate that something belongs to someone.
2. a class of pronouns that points out which thing, person, idea, etc. is referred to. - B. demonstrative pronoun
The demonstrative pronouns in English are: this and these for things that are near the speaker, and that and those, for things that are farther away from the speaker.
3. any word, phrase, or clause to which a pronoun, occurring later in a sentence, refers - C. antecedent
An example of an antecedent in this phrase "Sarah arrived late because she could not find her car keys", is the word Sarah, which is the antecedent of "She".
4. a possessive personal pronoun that represents both the possessor and the thing possessed - D. absolute possessive pronouns
Absolute possessive pronouns in English are for example: "mine", "yours", and "hers".
Answer:
A. I read the whole passage I'm pretty sure it's A. sorry if I'm wrong though
A) I have many classmates.
Answer:
an ellipsis is a moment with awkward silence. The can determine whether an ellipsis occurred if the people in the movie look at each other confused. Also, if they were in the middle of a conversation and just stopped talking
Explanation: