My friend, Alex, plays tennis.
My = possessive pronoun
friend = subject
Alex = an appositive (which is a noun that renames another noun right beside it) -- though not an adjective, it functions like one to explain which friend
plays = verb
tennis = direct object
hope this helps :)
Answer:
1,c 2,c 3,d 4, d 5,d 6,c 7,b 8,a
Explanation:
the first up to 3 is the same question is differ from the other.
Answer:
<h3>early 15c., "uninterrupted connection of parts in space or time," from Old French continuité, from Latin continuitatem (nominative continuitas) "a connected series," from continuus "joining, connecting with something; following one after another," from continere (intransitive) "to be uninterrupted," literally "to hang together" </h3>
<h3 />
<span>The answer is A-I didn't just like reading Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte; I loved it. (book titles are italicized)</span>