<span>the predominant theme or topic, as of a book, discussion, et</span>
Answer:
Visitors to Actun Tunichil Muknal, a cave in Belize that serves <u>as an </u>archaeological site<u>, have</u> to swim to its entrance<u>.</u>
Explanation:
The sentence has four mistakes:
- It is missing a comma at the end of the relative clause. Without it, the sentence does not make sense. The word has that follows is referring to the archeological site, which grammatically is the correct verb for a singular person, but semantically it does not make sense.
- When we add the comma to clarify that "a cave in Belize that serves as an archaeological site" is extra information about Actun Tunichil Muknal, the verb has must be in the plural form (have) since it is referring to visitors.
- The clause "a cave in Belize that serves archaeological site" has missing words. First, the adverb as to signify that the cave equals an archeological site. Secondly, the indefinite article "an" The indefinite article means that Actun Tunichil Muknal belongs to the group of archeological sites.
- The last mistake is the closing punctuation at the end of the sentence.
Answer:
sorry u gotta answer this urself, i was gonna help out but we prolly go to the same school and we might get in trouble if it flags it
Answer: This doesn't have an exact answer that I can give you because it depends on what you read...
Explanation:
Summary outline: What was what yyou read about? (use your own words)
Task: what was this meant to teach or do?
Audience: Who is the intended audience for this reading?
Purpose: Why did the author write this? What was his purpose?
Topic sentence: The MAIN sentence of the reading
Summary points 1 & 2: What were the 2 KEY things the authour talked about, and summarized the reading?
Answer:
In Chinatown
Explanation:
Waverly includes two characters: an American and another a Chinese one. Her National identity is American but she has a spot in her community because of her Chinese identity. Waverly's personality and background is influenced by her youth in San Francisco's Town center or Chinatown, where she was immersed in Chinese and Chinese-American communities and felt a sense of belonging.