Answer: A caravan of camels <u>takes</u> tourists into the desert near the city of Jaisalmer in India.
Explanation:
The subject and the verb must always agree in number. If a noun is singular, the verb must be singular as well. In this case, the noun phrase 'a caravan of camels' is the subject, which performs the action of the main verb. Since word 'caravan' is the head of this phrase, and it is singular, the verb form must be singular. It is, therefore, correct to say that "a caravan of camels takes tourists into the desert."
Answer: this is a strong question because it asks an opinion of the interview
Inflate, overdo,overdraw,distort
<u>Answer:</u>
"Provisional drivers could each save up to £500 on their car insurance by undertaking advanced driving lessons," the government has confirmed. "We want people to go on improving their driving skills throughout their driving careers," said David Ashworth, a junior minister at the Department for Transport. "This is about creating the right sort of education and incentivising people to do it."
Explanation:
<u>Inverted commas are also known as quotation marks. Their purpose is to indicate which words or sentences inside that structure were spoken by someone. We place a pair of inverted commas at the beginning of that person's speech, and another one at the ending. If the speech is interrupted by the author's words, the inverted commas can simply be placed again once the speech is resumed.</u>
Answer:
Once upon a time, while on a pirate ship, Captain Hook tried mightily <u>to lash</u> me with his wooden leg for disobeying the rules, but I was too quick for him. Before he could do so, I<u> lashed</u> my left arm across his jaw causing the weakened captain to fall overboard. Later, the crew learned that he had been eaten alive by a shark. Apparently, <u>the lash</u> to his face produced copious amounts of blood that attracted the hungry shark.
The End
Explanation:
1. verb -- strike (someone) with a whip or stick
2. verb -- (of an animal) move (a part of the body, especially the tail) quickly and violently.
3. noun -- a sharp blow or stroke with a whip or rope, typically given as a form of punishment.