The change that was made in the second sentence is that it created a compound sentence. The correct answer is option B. The compound subject now has two independent clauses: "The holidays are just around the corner" and "I need to go shopping". The independent clauses are connected with the coordinating conjunction "so".
Answer:
"The witnesses present."
Explanation:
Without passage 3, there's no way to know. Best guess is Choice 2
Answer:
Its midnight and Sarah is still working. She will be exhausted tomorrow.
Explanation:
Answer:
C. didn't suspect
Explanation:
In the passage, the part saying “didn’t suspect” is wrong. <u>The story is proposing the plan which should be in the future. All the rest of the passage uses future simple tense</u> – verb to be in the future form (will) and the verb in the infinitive.
“Didn’t suspect” is written in the form of past simple tense. This tense is used when some event has already happened.
<u>As the surprise party did not happen yet, but will in the future, this part has also to be written in the future simple tense.</u>
<u>The correct sentence should be ”He won’t suspect a thing”. </u>Won’t is a short form of will not – a negative form for future simple tense.
Answer:
The common root word that they all have in common is "cred".
Explanation:
<u>The root word "cred" is present in several words used in the English language. Some examples are: incredible, credulous, credential, credible, credence, and credit. "Cred" comes from Latin, and its original meaning is "believe".</u> Notice how all the words that have "cred" as their root are somehow related to the sense of "believe". If something is incredible, that means it is hard to believe it is true. If you show your credentials, you are proving your identity, so that someone else will believe you are who you are.