Compete subject : something similar
Predicate : happened to me in the first grade
After the Roman satirist Horace: Satire in which the voice is indulgent, tolerant, amused, and witty
There are two prepositional phrases acting as adverbs in the given sentence: <em>in a fresh-water lake </em>and <em>in a chlorinated pool.</em>
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Explanation:
A prepositional phrase is a group of words consisting of a preposition, its object, and words modifying the object. Most commonly, they modify nouns and verbs and can function as adjectives, adverbs, or nouns. Prepositional phrases that function as adverbs are called adverb prepositional phrases.
In the sentence <em>Joe and Hannah, the twins next door to me, prefer to swim in a fresh-water lake rather than in a chlorinated pool </em>we can see two adverb prepositional phrases: <em>in a fresh-water lake </em>and <em>in a chlorinated pool. </em>They modify the verb <em>to swim</em>. Like adverbs that modify verbs, adverb prepositional phrases can give us information about where, when, why, how, and to what extent the action described by the verb takes place. In this case, we receive information about the location (<em>to swim</em> <u><em>in a fresh-water lake</em></u><em> </em>and <em>to swim</em> <u><em>in a chlorinated pool</em></u><em>).</em>
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Learn more about prepositions and prepositional phrases here: brainly.com/question/7439913
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Answer:
A. He still has a great distance left to travel.
Explanation:
Robert Frost's poem "Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening" seems to talk of an unnamed traveler going through the woods on a snowy evening. And the speaker also reveals how he could not stay longer among the woods for he needs to move on.
On the surface, the poem seems like a simple poem that describes what the traveler/ speaker sees while going through the woods. And even though he'd like to stay longer and revel in the snowy scene, he couldn't. He reveals that he <em>"had promises to keep and miles to go before [he] sleep[s]"</em>. The "<em>miles</em>" could mean the distance he still needs to go. It could also mean 'life' that a person has to live before one 'sleep' forever.
Thus, the inference about the speaker's journey that best supports the poem is option A.