It would put an enthusiastic vibe throughout the piece. So an excited feel I guess.
Nominative case pronoun would be a pronoun in its basic form, so: I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they...
So, the correct answer is A, 'I' is a nominative case pronoun, whereas the other examples only have objective case pronouns: them, him, her.
The time i spend in nature was beautiful. I could feel the cold wet green grass tickle in between my toes as i walked bare foot. The air was fresh and flowed through my lungs soft and refreshing as i inhaled. The air made my skin damp and cold and the longer i stood out in the air i began to get paler and made me feel lifeless.
In a neat literary twist, Elizabeth's positive qualities are also her negative ones. She is a virtuous woman who is steadfast and true—but these traits also make her a bit of a cold fish. When we first meet her, she's especially cold...and thinks she smells something fishy.<span> She's got good reason to be suspicious and kind of distant, though: her husband has recently had an affair with their housekeeper, Abigail Williams.</span>
Answer:
Shut the door,will you?
Explanation:
We need to add 'will you'? as the tag to imperative sentences, but if the sentence starts with 'let's' then we need to add 'shall we'?