Answer: <u><em>Dear Grandma, </em></u>
<u><em>Thank you so much for the treats you sent me, they were really amazing. I had shared some with my siblings and they all loved it. Grandma, we have missed you a lot lately and cant wait for us to visit you doing the summer. We have not seen you in years and its honestly killing me. I owe my entire life to you, Grandma. You’ve helped make me into the person that I am today and the person who has yet to grow. I genuinely have no idea where I would be without you. Everything we’ve shared together is forever filed in a special part of my brain. A place for only you and me. It is somewhere I can go whenever we aren’t together and I'm missing you. It is a place I can go for advice, a good laugh, and a mood enhancer. All I have to do is think of your smile and my day is automatically so much better. You have provided me with so much that I will never be able to pay you back for, but I am going to continue to try every day. I am so unbelievably lucky to have you. Out of all the people in the world, all of the women to become grandmas, I got the best in my life.
</em></u>
<u><em> Love you to the moon and back,</em></u>
<u><em>Your favorite grandchild ;)</em></u>
I love you so much.
Explanation:
I haven’t read that story lol- people literally can’t do a WHOLE ESSAY for u reread the story
The two words in the above sentence which are predicate adjectives are d. dry and e. smooth.
A predicate adjective is similar to a subject adjective. It modifies the subject of the sentence. It is also sometimes called a subject complement because it adds to or complements the subject. It adds an attribute to a subject. For example, a simple sentence is:
I love cars.
The object is "I", the verb is "love" and the subject is "cars". The predicate is a combination of the verb and the subject. If I add the word "red" to the sentence ie.
I love red cars.
<span>I am describing the cars as being red. Therefore, in this case the predicate adjective is the word "red". </span>
The answer is Aunt Agatha does not consider Bertie's day-to-day activities to be very important.
In the excerpt from "Extricating Young Gussie," by P.G. Wodehouse, the narrator makes clear that Aunt Agatha does not take into account Bertie's daily plans. She is used to controlling everyone in her family and getting away with it.