Your best answer is D because of the lack of specific wording so it could just be an ordinary sentence not looked at as something written in a book specifically!
This question is incomplete; here is the complete question:
The rule that the subject and verb must be the same in number is called subject-verb ________________
The correct answer is Subject-verb Agreement
Explanation:
In grammar, one of the most basic rules is that the subject and verb must agree in number. This rule is known as subject-verb agreement and implies a singular verb should be preceded by a singular subject and vice versa. For example in "My mother cooks lasagna" the subject "my mother" is singular and the verb form "cooks" is also singular, this makes the sentence grammatically correct, while the sentence "They sings in the church" will be considered incorrect as the subject is plural and the verb form is singular.
I think so. I don’t know so much about Drake.
Answer:
Zora Neale Hurston's 1928 essay, "How It Feels to be Colored Me," ends with an image of various different colored bags propped against a wall. If you were to pour out the contents of the bags, you would find in each one a similar "jumble of small things priceless and worthless." The point is clear. It is the same one that Dr. Martin Luther King was to make decades later: the color of a person's skin tells you nothing about the content of his of her character.
In the 1920s or, for that matter, the 1960s, this straightforward approach to racial equality was the standard anti-racist position. Now, however, many people who consider themselves anti-racist would take issue with Hurston's view. They would argue that to disregard race entirely after centuries of inequality and oppression is itself a racist attitude. A white person who has profited from generations of colonialism, slave labor, and segregation and is now in a privileged position ought not to claim equality with a black person who...
Explanation: