It should be moved to the beginning of the sentence, that means, that it should be placed before "The motorcycles raced" (option A).
Explanation: "down the track" is a prepositional phrase. All prepositional phrases have no verbs nor subjects. These can be used as adjectives or adverbs. They can be placed either after the verb and at the begining of a sentence. When placed at the beginning of a sentence, it sounds more formal than the common structure composed of 'subject + verb + predicate' and this construction has to be followed by a comma.
In this case, the answer would be:
'Down the track, the motorcycles raced for the prize'.
Answer:
Explanation:
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hope this helped :)
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Answer:
D. | verb | taken the place of; succeeded
Explanation:
"Take the place of" or "succeeded" would best replace the word 'superseded' in this passage.
It isn't A because there is no evidence in the passage to support this answer.
It isn't B because there is no evidence in the passage to support this answer.
It isn't C because to supersede does not necessarily connote defeat in a literal sense.
Hope this isn't confusing. Hope this helps! :D