Reaction - I had an allergic reaction to getting near pollen.
Prerecord - ...
Incorrectly - Your sentence is incorrectly done.
Disobedient - You're acting disobedient.
Disagreeable - Your statement is disagreeable.
Refreshment - May I get a refreshment?
Unbreakable - Your thigh bone is unbreakable unless you do something very bad.
Declaration - We have a Declaration of Independence, Freedom Rules.
Retirement - My parents are saving up for retirement.
Misdialed - I misdialed your number and got another person.
Undefined -
Unhappily - James sighed unhappily.
Watchfully - ...
Gleefully - He watched gleefully.
Sportsmanship - Jordan has good sportsmanship.
Repayment - The check got lost so he has to do repayment.
Questionable - This math problem is very questionable.
Displacement - Mary's knee had a displacement and she had to wear a brace for 4 months.
Midshipman - ...
The correct personal pronoun to complete the sentence is the subject pronoun, C. I: "The funniest performers were Karl, Mike, and I.
The compound object "Karl, Mike, and I" is a subject complement.
A subject complement is a noun, a noun phrase, a pronoun, or an adjective that follows a linking verb to restate the subject of the sentence.
A linking verb acts as an equal sign, the subject is or becomes the object.
> performers = Karl, Mike, and I
A noun or a pronoun subject complement is called a predicate nominative.
A pronoun that functions as a subject complement (a predicate nominative) is always the subjective form.
The correct plural form of echo is echos or echoes. Either way it is grammarly correct. I believe that echoes is the correct form.
echoes
<span>“[O]h! well! perhaps it is better to wake up after all, even to suffer, rather than to remain a dupe to illusions all one's life."
</span>
To travel constantly without a fixed destination; wander