Answer:
Phillip is now blind, and everything is black. Timothy is shocked at first, but he tells Phillip that the blindness is only temporary. The same thing happened to a man in Barbados, and he got his eyesight back. Phillip's pain is gone, but he still has a good freakout.
Explanation:
that is what happened in chapter 4
Answer:
This is about creative writing, so you should learn to creatively write.
Explanation:
To be creative, you have to think outside of the box. Some of the most exciting creative writing is about things that don't exist. What are some things that probably don't really exist? Superheroes, time travel. You could write about how you find a time machine and travel to the past or future.
Just think: what multimedia(forms of art, tv, movies, books) do I like the most that is entirely fiction? Then, try to make your own story that you think is exciting.
1. disheveled (meaning unkempt, messy, hurried, etc)
2. infuriated (mad, angry, ticked, etc)
Answer:
B. The lovely young ballet company
Explanation:
I will be completly honest! I am horrible at predicates so I looked it up and here is an example off the internet.
Here's an example. In the sentence "The wall is purple," the subject is "wall," the predicate adjective is "purple" and the linking verb is "is." So, it's subject, verb, and predicate adjective.
pred·i·cate
See definitions in:
All
Grammar
Logic
nounGRAMMAR
/ˈpredəkət/
the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject (e.g., went home in John went home ).
"predicate adjective"
verb
/ˈpredəˌkāt/
1.
GRAMMAR•LOGIC
state, affirm, or assert (something) about the subject of a sentence or an argument of a proposition.
"a word that predicates something about its subject"