Answer:
1- (Whoosh) (clack) (hiss) (ba-bump) (tick) (creak) (whoosh again)
2- my experiences on a roller coaster
3- the author is filled with joy and is very happy they were able to ride the coaster
Explanation:
The correct matches are as follows:
<span>1.language spoken by educated Americans
</span>idiom<span>
2.street language that coins new words and new meanings
</span>slang
<span>
3.regional variation of the national language
</span>dialect<span>
4.language of a skill, trade, or profession
</span>standard English<span>
5.phrases and expressions unique to a language
</span>jargon<span>
6.sounds and sound patterns that are meaningful to people from the same culture
</span>language<span>
7.graphic representation of sounds
</span>writing<span>
8.language spoken by a child learning to talk
</span>ungrammatical speech<span>
</span>
Because he's looking for things to do.
Sorry I might be late, but bones mama made a Pecan pie for her brother.
The correct personal pronoun to complete the sentence is the subject pronoun, C. I: "The funniest performers were Karl, Mike, and I.
The compound object "Karl, Mike, and I" is a subject complement.
A subject complement is a noun, a noun phrase, a pronoun, or an adjective that follows a linking verb to restate the subject of the sentence.
A linking verb acts as an equal sign, the subject is or becomes the object.
> performers = Karl, Mike, and I
A noun or a pronoun subject complement is called a predicate nominative.
A pronoun that functions as a subject complement (a predicate nominative) is always the subjective form.