Answer:
An absolute phrase is a type of the phrase which modifies a noun in a sentence, but without being connected to the sentence with a conjunction. An absolute phrase is separated from the rest of the sentence by a comma, and if we remove the phrase the sentence won't lose its original meaning.
e.g. Her luggage has been packed, Sarah went to the airport.
We create an absolute sentence when we want to add some unnecessary detail to our sentence, but without changing its original meaning. In the example above, the first part of the sentence represents the absolute phrase, while the second part of the sentence contains the important information - that Sarah went to the airport.
The most vivid would be the most descriptive which is C, the dog scrambled out of the water.
If I could time travel, I would go into the pass and prevent Christopher Columbus to invade the so-called "New World". Without him here....there wouldn't be any conflict there is today. Everybody would be happy on there own.
Answer:
horrible deformity- nightmarish
Folk Tales. Especially if its from the past and can be passed down, most Folk Tales are imaginative!