He asked him to give up the place he loved. He bonded with it for generations.
A declarative sentence is a statement. Such as, "I went to the park yesterday." That is declarative, because it is stating a fact. Another way to know it's declarative is, all declarative sentences end in periods. But you shouldn't get these mixed up with imperative which are commands. Hope this helped!
<span>Respectable painters could do both. Of direction, they use a "reputable" spray gun or the nice of brushes depending on their prefference. In the event that they spray they still will use a brush for "slicing" and trimming. Some may even use a roller alternatively of spray or brush. The change is the "pro's" do a good/appropriate job of PREP. They be certain paint is clean and loose paint is eliminated then bare wooden is properly primed. If they do not do a excellent prep job then they don't seem to be rather professionals!
But to answer this question, it would be an infinitive phrase. </span>
1.-The prepositional Phrase is A). Prepositional Phrases can act as adjectives or adverbs.
2.-The correct answer is D) to curse or jinks. Because is like to use inadequete words.
3.- The right answer is C) The teacher "referenced" the book during today's lecture. It means the teacher gave references of the book. In the first example it should be: The heightened emotion "affected" me, not effected me. In letter B) it should be the lotion had an immediate "effect" on the sunburn, not affect. It didn't show affection for the sunburn. And in letter D) it should be the orange throw pillow "complemented" the other warm colors in the room, not complimented. It didn't give compliments.