A gerund may function as a: subject complement, subject, object of preposition, and direct object.
Answers: B), D), E) and F)
<em>Hii.</em>
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<h3><em>Some info:</em></h3>
<em>If we emphasize different words, we can vastly change the meaning of this statement very quickly. But to see how the emphasis can change the perception and possibly even the meaning stress one word only in the sentence.</em>
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<em>Examples:</em>
- <em>Do you even mean it when you say</em><u><em> i love you?</em></u>
- <u><em>I love you?</em></u>
- <em>I dont know </em><u><em>if i love you</em></u><em>.</em>
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<em>Hope this helps.</em>
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<em>~NatLikesAnime~</em>
<em>#LearningWithBrainly</em>
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The correct answers are to study medicine; adverb.
Infinitive phrases are relatively easy to spot - they begin with the word to, are followed by the main verb, and the rest of the words closely connected in meaning. In the example above, the infinitive phrase is <em>to study medicine - </em>we have the word <em>to, </em>the verb <em>study, </em>and the object <em>medicine. </em>(Even though the phrase <em>to college </em>also begins with <em>to, college </em>is not a verb but rather a noun - this is a prepositional phrase).
The use of the infinitive phrase is adverbial - it means that it can tell us the time, place, manner, etc. of the verb, of the action being performed. In the example above, we see the reason why <em>Candice went to college. </em>
Answer:
just start with your name and where your from
Explanation: