<em>We planned to take a trip to Asia in three years or less.</em>
The modifier "in three years or less" was misplaced.
- A <u>misplaced modifier</u> is a word or phrase which is separated from the subject it modifies, thus making the sentence syntactically incorrect as well as illogical:<em> I found the </em><u><em>stained</em></u><em> man's hankerchief</em>.
- A <u>squinting modifier</u> creates ambiguity in a sentence through its placement, by making it unclear which part it modifies (the one that comes before it or the one that comes after it): <em>Combing your hair </em><u><em>softly</em></u><em> detangles it</em>.
- A <u>dangling modifier</u> gives an information without clearly stating its subject in the sentence. It often consists of "<em>having</em> + past participle" or "<em>being</em> + past participle" constructions, like: <u><em>Being tired after the show</em></u><em>, going straight home was the best plan</em>.
Answer:
A periodical about restaurant operations and services.
An encyclopedia article about disaster management.
Explanation:
A secondary source is a source which discusses (summarizes, evaluates or retells) the information that was originally presented in a primary source. Secondary source authors did not directly participate in the phenomenon that they are exploring, as opposed to primary source authors, who had a direct connection with it. Secondary sources are<em> journals, articles, encyclopedias, dictionaries, reports, etc.</em>
Answer:
I spend these two holidays with my grandparents and cousins.
Explanation:
I want to spend this weekend with my grandparents and cousins that lives in another city. By reaching there I will go to the zoo and other recreational parks there with my cousins, uncle and parents. I will going to play cricket with my cousins and play video games as well. I will experience so much fun with my family and cousins in these two holidays.
Answer:
The four steps below will show you how to write thesis statements quickly and effectively.
Restate the idea in the prompt or ask yourself the question the prompt asks. ...
Adopt a position/state your opinion. ...
List three reasons you will use to argue your point. ...
Combine information from 1-3 into one sentence.
Explanation: