C. Deceptive
He made it seem like him and fortunato were on good terms when really he was bad mouthing him in his mind and lead fortunato to his death
Because the author has researched the area and talked to people who know the land
Pattern A (add 5)
First term is 1 so, add 5 to 1, for the 2nd term, keeping adding 5 to the values you find from previous
1 + 5 = 6
6 + 5 = 11
11 + 5 = 16
16 + 5 = 21
1, 6, 11, 16, 21
Pattern B ( minus 4)
First term is 28, so minus 4 to get a value, now take 4 from the value & so on...
28 - 4 = 24
24 - 4 = 20
20 - 4 = 16
16 - 4 = 12
28, 24, 20, 16, 12
Hope this helps!
Answer:
Preposition
Adverb
Prepositional phrase
Adjective
Prepositional phrase
Adverb
Noun
Prepositional phrase
Object of the prepositional phrase
Explanation:
- 'In' in the first sentence is a preposition as it is followed by the noun to form the prepositional phrase which will function as the adjective to modify the noun 'engineers.'
- 'Around' in the second sentence is functioning as an adverb because it modifies the verb 'ran' and provides information about where the action took place.
- 'At Night' in the third sentence is a prepositional phrase as it consists of a preposition plus its object(night) and function as the adverb in the sentence.
- 'Disgruntled' in the fourth sentence functions as an adjective as it qualifies the noun 'engineers' in the sentence.
- 'Along the river bank' is also functioning as a prepositional phrase which is acting as an adverb to modify the verb 'strolled.'
- 'Nightly' is the adverb in the next sentence as it describes the manner in which the action was done.
- 'Engineers' in the next sentence is the noun as it refers to the class of a people and acts as the subject in the sentence.
- 'In the union' is also a prepositional phrase which is acting as an adjective to qualify the noun in the sentence.
- 'Union' in the last sentence is the object of the preposition as it is followed by a preposition and forms the prepositional phrase to act like an adjective in the sentence.
Hello :)
My answer would be, you should be constantly working on your style as you write. Whether that means cracking open the thesaurus or checking words in the dictionary- you should always be working on your style. If by correctness you mean punctuation and grammar, the best time to do that is after you have everything written. If you do it after, you’ll be able to nick-pick at every detail and improve whatever it is you’re writing.
Hope this helps >.