This is an infinitive - to + bare infinitive. It is not an adverb as they usually end in -ly. (He drives dangerously). It is not a gerund as it ends with -ing (Reading is fun). It is not a participle because there are several kinds of participle: 1. present - Lying on her bed, she was thinking about him. 2. past - The books were on the table, covered in binders. 3. perfect - Having finished her homework, she went outside. So naturally, infinitive is the only choice.
I feel like the answer could be either direct or indirect, because you need a direct object to have an indirect object, and there is both in this example.
Maybe because it was part human and part fish ,so it kind of weird
Answer:
The subject will always be a person, place, or thing. In other words, the noun inside the sentence.
The verb will be the action taken by the subject.
For example:
Elizabeth baptized her son in the water.
The subjects in this case is Elizabeth and son. The action taken by Elizabeth is baptized, or the past tense of baptizing her son in the water.
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I don’t see the passage but it is probably struggle.