A sentence should start with a capital letter and end with a full stop, question mark or exclamation mark. Capital letters should also be used for proper nouns, like a person’s name or the name of a country or city and also for the title of a book, film, magazine or article. Any other capital letters should not be there.
Some of these sentences need speech marks. Speech marks go before and after the part that is being spoken and punctuation should go inside the speech marks. For example: “I’m thirsty,” he said, “can I have some water?” Another example would be: As they walked, Bob asked, “Where are we going?”
There are also some typos. In number 1, should it be ‘were taking a trip to the west’ or ‘we’re taking a trip to the west’. Remember we’re means we are. In number 2, ‘im’ is incorrect. In number 3, ‘issue if life’ doesn’t make sense. You also need to think about the use of ‘a’ before ‘article’. ‘A’ is used before a consonant (b, c, d, f, g, etc.) for example ‘a book’, while ‘an’ is used before a vowel (a, e, i, o, u) for example ‘an apple’. Number 4, ‘we did not taked the books’ doesn’t make sense, so you need to change ‘taked’.
This should be everything you need to correct the sentences.
Answer:
A. are the sun, the sand, and the restaurants.
Explanation:
The first option contains parallelism which makes the sentence a piece of really effective writing.
Language
gender differences
status differences
These are specific items that can distort or prevent communication within an organization
Because they want to write an objective account. They write true stories, so they need as much information as it is possible to gather. If they used only one source, it wouldn't be a believable, authentic, and true story. Opposing or contradictory views are a valuable piece of information to include in a biography. They show the controversies of an age, not just various personal accounts about someone.
<span>The sentence “Jason and
Raci like to read the same books.” contains a
compound subject.</span>
<span>To add, </span>compound
subject<span> <span>is two or
more individual noun phrases coordinated to form a single, longer noun phrase. </span></span>Compound subjects<span> <span>give rise to many obstacles in the proper usage
of grammatical concurrence among the </span></span>subject<span> <span>and other entities (verbs, pronouns, etc.).</span></span>