Answer:
1 and 2 are the dependent clauses
Explanation:
If someone wrote you a letter that just had "Mrs. Basel, Mrs. Bates, and Mrs. Wonders" on it, you'd be pretty confused at what message they were trying to convey, same with "Are pretty legit teachers." However, if you received a letter with just "I love ELA!" or "Reading makes me happy" on it, you'd understand the message just fine. 3 and 4 can be spoken normally on their own; however, 1 and 2 need another clause to make sense.
<em><u>Answer:</u></em>
- The chorus describes two noble households (called “houses”) in the city of Verona.
<em><u>Explanation:</u></em>
The houses hold an "old resentment" against one another that remaining parts a wellspring of savage and bleeding struggle. The Chorus expresses that from these two houses, two "star-crossed" sweethearts will show up. These darlings will patch the squabble between their families by passing on. The narrative of these two darlings, and of the horrible hardship between their families, will be the theme of this play.
Answer:
invocation of various aspects of God – his wisdom, his eye, his ear, his hand, etc. lists of the things against which protection is required, including false prophets, heathens, heretics, witches and wizards (druids) brief invocation of Christ for protection.
Explanation:
hope it helps :)
answer:
true.
- reflexive and intensive pronouns:
are the same set of words but they have different
functions in a sentence.
C) carefully planned
Reason:
he wouldn’t make a quick decision or a accidental decision and it says he planned it so it’s not lucky he carefully planned to go to the out of state college