Hi,
In the first sentence, the subject is ‘you’.
In the second one it is ‘I’.
In the third one it is ‘You’.
To find the subject in a sentence you should look at the verb and find the person/people/thing that make the action the verb describes.
Hope this helps! If my answer was not clear enough or you’d like further explanation please let me know.
This question is incomplete. Here is the complete question:
All of the following are parallel in structure with “crying over the loss of my boyfriend” except __________.
A) I felt so bad yesterday afternoon
B) texting all of my girl friends
C) eating all the ice cream in the freezer
D) listening to my collection of sad music
Answer:
The correct answer is option A) I felt so bad yesterday afternoon.
Explanation:
If you pay attention, all the options, including the example, contain verbs ending in<em> ing.
</em>
Option A does not have the same structure, therefore that is the option that does not fit with the rest.
Words ending in <em>ing </em>can be the following: gerunds, verbal nouns, present participles. In the case of the example we have the ending <em>ing</em> used as a gerund, where the verb is used as if it were a noun.
Given this information we can say that the correct answer is option A.
Answer:
"Characterized by propriety and dignity and good taste."
Explanation:
To describe someone as decorous generally means they are polite or have good taste.
She met her friends in the bottom floor of the hotel, the lobby, so they could head over to the pool for a cool, brisk swim.
Hope this helps!
Answer: hadn't they?
Explanation:
We can add question tags like isn't it?, can you? or didn't they? to a statement to make it into a question. Question tags are more common in speaking than writing.
We often use question tags when we expect the listener to agree with our statement. In this case, when the statement is positive, we use a negative question tag.