Answer:
what is the question though
Explanation:
Answer:
B. The lovely young ballet company
Explanation:
I will be completly honest! I am horrible at predicates so I looked it up and here is an example off the internet.
Here's an example. In the sentence "The wall is purple," the subject is "wall," the predicate adjective is "purple" and the linking verb is "is." So, it's subject, verb, and predicate adjective.
pred·i·cate
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Grammar
Logic
nounGRAMMAR
/ˈpredəkət/
the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject (e.g., went home in John went home ).
"predicate adjective"
verb
/ˈpredəˌkāt/
1.
GRAMMAR•LOGIC
state, affirm, or assert (something) about the subject of a sentence or an argument of a proposition.
"a word that predicates something about its subject"
C. There's no way to undo the hurt, no way to erase what was said. There's no way to make someone forget.
Parallelism is the repetition of the same grammatical structure across a list, group of phrases, or group of sentences. In this answer, the parallel element is the repetition of "no way to" follow by a verb and direct object. This answer also address that idea that you can't take back words by saying that the words can't be undone, erased, or forgotten. Option A also uses a parallel structure, but it doesn't show that words can't be taken back. Option B is not in parallel structure. Option D begins with a parallel structure but it's not continued through to the last sentence.
I think Athena would do this to see who Odysseus is faithful too. It suggests that Odysseus has more will power than most think.