2. “as if you could use a”
You look as if you could use a holiday.
3. “as if he has lost”
He looks as if he has lost weight since I last saw him.
4. “as though she had met”
She felt as though she had met Gary before.
5. “as if she were”
She behaves as if she were a beauty queen.
6. “as if she needs”
She looks as if she needs a rest.
7. “the way that he”
I mowed the lawn the way that he told me to.
8. “as if she is”
She acts as if she is a “millionaires.”
9. “the way that she”
I taught the class the way that she instructed me to.
10. “ as if he has gotten”
My grandfather looks as if he has gotten much thinner since I last saw him.
11. “ the silver the way that she”
I polished the silver the way that she told me to.
12. “me as if I was”
He orders me as if I was his slave.
It means a girl is built in a aesthetically pleasing way <span />
The ancient Babylon (located in west Asia), ancient Egypt (located in north Africa), the ancient India, which is located in the South Asia and China which is located in east Asia.
On is the only preposition in this sentence. A preposition shows location, such as, on, over, beside, etc.
Answer:
Pronoun
Explanation:
<u>In the sentence - </u><u>This is a big mess.</u><u> - </u><u>'this' </u><u>is used as a pronoun, to be exact </u><u>a demonstrative pronoun. </u>
A demonstrative pronoun is a pronoun that is used to point at something specific within a sentence. It can be items in space or time.
These pronouns are This, That (for singular), These and Those (for plural).
This / These are used for singular items that are nearby. That / Those are used for multiple items that are not near us.
<u>Examples:</u>
This is my cat. - we can point at it, the cat is near us.
That is a plane. - the plane is not near us, so we use 'that'.
These are my favorite toys. - we point at many toys, and they are near us.
Those are my classmates. - we point at the classmates, they are not near.
Why 'this' is not a determiner in the sentence - This is a big mess.
A determiner is a word that introduces a noun. <u>It always comes before a noun, not after or without a noun near!</u>
<u>This car</u> is bad.
<u>These pies</u> look delicious.
I hope it helped you :)