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Answer:
Absolute
Prepositional
Participial
Explanation:
A subordinate CLAUSE (not phrase) contains a subject and verb, is introduced by a conjunction, and supports the main clause.
An absolute phrase combines a noun and a participle. (e.g. shining stars, crossed arms)
A prepositional phrase is a modifying phrase consisting of a preposition and its object. (on the table, beside the stairs)
A participial phrase will begin with a present or past participle and will always function as an adjective, describing a nearby noun or pronoun.
(e.g. PUTTING ON HER BOOTS, she trudged into the snow.)
Statements can have more than one counterexample. True.
<span>'This living hand, now warm and capable' is an oddity amongst John Keats's poetry – indeed, amongst Romantic poetry in general. ... (Fittingly, Keats wrote 'This living hand' on a manuscript page of one of his unfinished poems.) The most likely date for the poem's composition is towards the end of 1819.</span><span>
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Answer:
Some books are broken into different parts to separate themes, same ideas, and different times. say a regular book is probably split into chapters, the chapters relate to everything in that one chapter. and informative book will spilt up information by relevancy, how important a topic is, or what it relates to.
Explanation:
Hope this helps! :)