D., My appointment is scheduled for Monday, July 4....
Answer:
<h3>Firstly, this is not a sentence. Correcting it to “Hurrah! We have won the match.” would be the first step. Note that this is *TWO* sentences, not one. Converting a sentence to pass requires that a sentence have a verb in it. The first sentence has no verb. It can not be converted.</h3>
Explanation:
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<h2>
<u>PLEASE</u><u> </u><u>MARK</u><u> </u><u>ME </u><u>BRAINLIEST</u><u> AND</u><u> FOLLOW</u><u> ME</u><u> LOTS</u><u> OF</u><u> LOVE</u><u> FROM</u><u> MY</u><u> HEART'AND</u><u> SOUL</u><u> DARLING</u><u> TEJASVINI</u><u> SINHA</u><u> HERE</u><u> ❤️</u></h2>
A simple subject is the thing doing the verb, but excluding any extra details about the subject.
In this case, the subjects would be “men and melons”.
A simple predicate is just the verb, instead of the entire verb phrase.
In this case, the verb would be “are”.
1. Yes, I'd like one of those cakes, please.
2. "Can you please take a photo of us?"
"Sure, you can stand over there."
3. "Can we please have these two t-shirts?"
"Yes, which colours would you like?"
4. "I'd like a cappuccino, please."
"Would you like chocolate on it?"