<span>the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words.</span>
D. not part of a pair or set
Answer: appositive
Explanation:
An appositive is a noun phrase whereby one noun or in some other cases a pronoun is used, then there'll be another word that'll be used to clarify the noun or pronoun.
In thus case, the noun is "Dr. Benton Jones" while "a winner of the Nobel Prize for his chemistry theories" is clarifying Dr Benton Jones.
Therefore, this is an example of appositive.
Answer:
1. Capitalize the name of the country.
2. Remove the all caps for "do not."
3. Change the informal "you" pronoun to agree with the subject 'people.'
4. Change the exclamation point to a period.
5. Eliminate the contraction for "don't."
6. Replace the word 'impact' for 'effect.'
Thus, .....
Some people in the United States do not care about the environment because they do not see the effects of pollution.
Explanation:
Answer:
The teeter-totter was shared by the boys.
Explanation:
Passive voice is when the object of the sentence becomes the subject of the sentence. The subject of the sentence then receives the action instead of doing it. Passive voice always includes a form of the verb 'to be' and a particle of the main verb. In the case of the last sentence, the teeter-totter is the object/subject. "Was" is the past tense form of the verb "to be." Shared is the past particle of the verb "share."
So basically, the breakdown is like this:
The teeter-totter + was + shared by + the boys.
object past tense past particle subject
of the verb of the verb
'to be' 'share'
All the other sentences are in active voice as the subject is doing the action. "Lilly took", "Little boy arrived", "The boy started playing" all have the subject in front of the verb.
Hope this helps. :)