Here we can observe that the verb used doesn't reflect the correct tense to express when this action took/is taking/will take place. There are many tenses where you could choose from, depending of the time of action:
Tenses: Simple, Progressive, Perfect, Perfect progressive
Times: Past, Present, and Future
Imagine all the combinations!
The simplest example we could make is if this action is a routine that happens continuously, the action verb (invite) is changed to simple present for the third person of singular (invites):
<span>Tommy, in an effort to maintain clowning's positive roots, invites dancers to weekly performance battles.</span>
Peter and crystal are people they are the subject and brought plenty of food and drinks is the predicate. every sentence should have ATLEAST 1 subject and 1 predicate
I don't know what your options are but from my experience I have to go with faithfulness and/or loyalty.
Hope this helps!
-Payshence
Answer:
should be a, because this isnt a thesis statement, its a detail.
An adverb clause is a group of words that function as an adverb. For example: "Unless you run fast, you will miss your bus." The bold words are part of the adverb clause.