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Google Scholar is best used for a) scholarly resources, including articles and theses that span countless disciplines.
Why?
Google Scholar is a search engine especially designed for searching and indexing schorlarly and academic resources, like journals, books, technical reports, theses, conference papers and many more. It was launched in 2004. Google Scholar's slogan is "Standing on the shoulders of giants", a reference to the previous work of scientists and scholars, that is the foundation over which the new generations build upon.
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Answer:
a local business owner
Explanation:
" I am writing to request a small donation of items from your bakery for our faculty."
Answer:
E
Explanation:
The anwser is e because it's a and b reply back to see if it helps.
Question 1
The correct answer is d.
The possessive nouns are nouns that we use to express that a person or an object belongs to someone or something. We usually make them by adding apostrophe ('s) on the noun itself:
<em>boy's</em>
<em>mum's</em>
<em>Kate's</em>
In this particular case, we can notice that the sentence d. My dream is that one day my garden will be just as beautiful and productive as Sandy's! has a possessive noun and it is Sandy's.
SANDY (noun) + 'S = SANDY'S (possesive noun)
The other examples show the use of the possessive PRONOUNS.
a. Everything I know about gardening I learned from <u>my</u> good friend Sandy.
b. When she showed me <u>her</u> big, healthy, vegetable garden and offered me some gardening tips, I decided to listen hard.
c. Then she taught me how to cultivate rich and healthy soil and helped me identify which types of plants are best for the environment in <u>my</u> yard.
Question 2
The correct answer is c.
Proper nouns express a <u>unique person/object and become with capital letters</u>. All the other are<u> common nouns</u> (garden, soil, environment).
Question 3
The correct answer is c.
The present participle is the form we get when we add 'ing' to the verb.
<em>dig + ing = digging </em>
...as it appears in the example: A few weeks later, when I was digging up seeds that had not even sprouted yet, Sandy came over to introduce herself with a basket of fresh produce from her garden.
Figurative language goes beyond the literal meanings of words to create special effects or feelings<span>. It is a </span>word<span> or phrase that is not meant to be taken literally but figuratively.</span>