Dame is the name of a woman who has been given an official title equivalent to the rank of knight
Answer: Gary Turk's spoken-word poem's theme develops from technology being a distraction from time spent with others to technology taking away opportunities in life that we could have had if we paid more attention to our surroundings. On line 2 it says "I speak to all of them every day yet none of them really know me" this explains how a person may feel if they and their friends spend all their time online communicating rather than having conversations in real life. While communicating to someone via text there are nonverbal cues that are lost. Then, on lines 73-74 the poem says "But none of these times ever happened. You never had any of this when you’re too busy looking down, you don’t see the chances you miss" which explains that looking down at your phone causes you to lose sight in everything else that is around you. You could miss opportunities that could have changed your life just because you were too preoccupied staring at a screen.
Note: sorry if this doesnt make sense, I tried to answer it to the best of my abilitiy lol. I had to answer the same question and this is just what I said.
Answer:
I would almost say D.
Explanation:
Sorry if I'm wrong though-
An adjective clause is basically a phrase (to be exact, a dependent clause: a group of words that can't be a sentence) that provides more description. It begins with a pronoun or adverb, like: who, whom, that, which, when, where, or why. It is not necessary to the sentence, so you can take it out and it still makes sense.
Let's work backwards. D is "If I put on headphones, I can play the electric piano without disturbing others." "If I put on headphones" is a phrase, a dependent clause, providing more description. Does it start with one of the words above? No. Is it necessary to the sentence? Yes, because this is the whole point of the sentence: to tell you HOW the character can play the piano without disturbing others, using headphones. D is incorrect.
Here's C: "I have taken piano lessons since I was six years old." "Since I was six years old" provides more description and is dependent. Does it start with one of the words above? No. Is it necessary to the sentence? Yes, because again, it's the point of the sentence. "I have taken piano lessons" doesn't tell you much! C is incorrect.
What about B? "When I first learn a difficult piece, I play it very slowly." "When I first learn a difficult piece" provides more description, and is a dependent clause. Does it start with one of the words above? YES: it starts with "when"!! We're getting closer. But is it necessary to the sentence? Try it: "I play it very slowly." But WHY does the character play it slowly? This phrase IS necessary, to explain, because it's the point of the sentence! B is incorrect.
That just leaves A: "My new electric piano, which includes over 1,000 different settings, is fun to play." The dependent clause providing more description is "which includes over 1,000 different settings." Does it start with one of the words above? YES, it starts with "which"!! Is it necessary to the sentence? Try it without the clause. "My new electric piano is fun to play." That works!! The clause is NOT necessary, starts with "which," AND provides more description! We have our winner!
Answer: A