Villian...
i can make up a story and send it to you on email or something !,
good luck tho
Option B, Down
Mom has to descend the basement stairs.
You can get rid of <em>down</em>, because the word <em>descend</em> means to go down.
Radio and television broadcasters must receive a license from the government because, according to American law, the public possesses the airwaves. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) gives these licenses and is in charge of controlling the airwaves.
<h3>Who said television is a extensive wasteland?</h3>
The phrase "vast wasteland" was meant to Minow by his friend, reporter and freelance author John Bartlow Martin. Martin had recently watched twenty straight hours of television as research for a magazine piece, and figured it was "a vast wasteland of junk".
<h3>What regulates the schedules we see on television?</h3>
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is an independent agent of the United States federal government that regulates transmissions by radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable across the United States.
To learn more about Federal Communications, refer
brainly.com/question/1407895
#SPJ4
1. flying
As the directions state, a participle is a verb. Both flying and headed are verbs. However, headed is used as an action verb in the sentence. It is what the geese are doing. Flying is an adjective describing the geese as "flying by". You should be able to cross out the participial phrase and the sentence will still make sense as in "The geese are headed south for the winter."
2. B. Clapping wildly.
Clapping wildly is the participial phrase. It describes the audience. Option C contains the main verb of the sentence "shouted" so this is not a participial phrase. Option D has an infinitive "to come".
3. cat
The participial phrase in the sentence is "hearing the footsteps of its owner". The cat is what hears the footsteps.
Answer:
I have no idea what your question is, so im just going to make an educated guess and explain my reasoning.
Explanation:
An example of a conditional sentence:
A conditional sentence tells what would or might happen under certain conditions. It most often contains an adverb clause beginning with 'if' and an independent clause. ... For example: "If it's cold, I'll wear a jacket” or “I'll (I will) wear a jacket if it's cold.” Either clause can go first.
The 4 types of conditional sentences:
There are 4 basic types of conditionals: zero, first, second, and third. It's also possible to mix them up and use the first part of a sentence as one type of conditional and the second part as another. These sentences would be called “mixed conditionals.”
The 3 types of conditional sentences?
Conditional Sentences / If-Clauses Type I, II und III
Form: if + Simple Present, will-Future.
Form: if + Simple Past, Conditional I (= would + Infinitive)
Form: if + Past Perfect, Conditional II (= would + have + Past Participle)