Answer:
The question we can form using the information in the sentence and the word in parentheses is:
Whose grandfather had a small farm in the county?
Explanation:
<u>"Whose" is a pronoun used to indicate possession, be it in a declarative sentence or in an interrogative one. If I wish to know, for instance, who the owner of a car parked in front of my house is, I can ask: Whose car is this?</u>
<u>Since we are supposed to use "whose" to ask a question as well as the information in the given sentence, we need to find a possession relationship to ask about.</u> Of course, the farm has an owner - the grandfather. But the way the sentence is structure does not allow us to ask about him while using "whose". However, the grandfather "belongs", so to speak, to Roger, and the structure allows us to use "whose" to ask about him. Therefore, the question we can form is:
Whose grandfather had a small farm in the county?
A. Pedants have the right of way at intersections.
A pedant is a person who is a perfectionist and just obnoxiously meticulous, specifically with language or academics. The proper word to use for selection A. would be pedestrian, which means a person walking along a road.
A farce is a type of play that is actually quite similar to
the comedy movies of today. There is
little seriousness within a farce, and it is often characterized by brash humor
or slapstick humor. The situational
settings within a farce are so outlandish that they could safely be understood
to probably never happen in the real world.