Shall or will spray I believe is the correct answer XD
Answer:
In The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle Conan Doyle offers up a tale of goodwill that has a darker flipside. The goodwill sees Sherlock Holmes trying to return a hat and goose lost by someone on Christmas Day, but the story then deals with the theft of a precious stone, the Blue Carbuncle.
Explanation:
<h2>
If correct, PLEASE MARK BRAINLIEST!</h2><h3>
Ty</h3><h3><u>
-Natasha</u></h3>
I have no idea what half of the words are in the question
Who would be correct if you read the sentence and fill in the blank
The two mistakes in the sentence are "trophys" and "metals".
The plural form of "trophy" is "trophies" not "trophys" because the plural form of nouns that end in "-y" is usually "-ies".
In the sentence, "metals" is not wrongly spelled but it does not make much sense. It is quite strange to say to someone not to touch trophies and metals, the two objects do not seem to have any type of relationship. If you consider that the person is talking about awards and prizes, instead of metals, he or she is referring to "medals".
Even though there are two more mistakes, I don't think the question aims at those. Just remember that the sentence should start with a capital letter and finish with a full stop.
So the sentence would read: Do not touch trophies or medals.