Answer:
it is intense questioning to get answers. interrogation is used by police officers, detectives, and military inforcement.
Explanation:
The definition of the antecedent of a sentence is that if a word refers to a previous noun or pronoun in the sentence, that pronoun or noun is its antecedent. Let's eliminate some options. Looked is a verb so it cannot be. All around the room is a general space qualifier and thus this is irrelevant too (it does not refer to Samuel's room for example). Now we find the relevant part, "his shoes". The pronoun is his. Hence, we have that the antecedent is Samuel.
There are not any underlined verb however most of the verbs are in the infinitive form therfore the unlike verb is "needs" having said that:
The form of the verb underlined below is Indicative
The Indicative form express facts or opinions rather than intentions, express of moods, desire for someone to do something.
In this case "needs" shows the fact for someone "to open the door to let the dog out".
Language-related translation problems are known as word choice errors. The word anywhere in the second sentence is a word choice error. Thus, option b is correct.
<h3>What is a word choice error?</h3>
The mistake that occurs for a variety of reasons, including defective language and incorrect word choice, and alters the meaning of the statement is the error due to the word choice.
The word anywhere is used incorrectly and is the error that is unfit in the sentence making the sentence to be incorrect. The other three sentences have the correctly used and placed words making them appropriate.
Therefore, in option b the word anywhere causes a word choice error.
Learn more about word choice errors here:
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In William Golding's novel Lord of the Flies, the character of Jack represents the dark side of humanity. Unlike Ralph and Piggy, who deliberately seek to retain a sense of humanity, Jack and his followers quickly descend to the most vile, basic instincts of man. Jack becomes consumed with blood lust and leads his faction among the young boys in creating a violent tribal environment. When the effort to hunt down the pig and consume its meat becomes an obsession, he cries out in primal enthusiasm, "Kill the pig. Cut her throat. Spill her blood." In Chapter 5, Ralph and Piggy discuss their concerns about Jack and how the latter holds dangerous grudges against them for their role in controlling the fire and for the simple fact of their refusal to join Jack's group. Jack, in short, is a bad boy. He is capable of anything, and the boys with Ralph know it.
So it is established that Jack represents the dark side of man. Does that equate him, a twelve-year-old boy stranded on an island, with the most reprehensible figure in history? Probably not. Jack's circumstances and his youth clearly separate him from an adult who knowingly conceptualizes a theory of racial superiority, who maneuvers himself to the top of a government, and who proceeds to carry out the greatest crime against humanity in history. To the extent that Jack can be considered a microcosm of Hitler, even that comparison is weak. Again, the circumstances surrounding Hitler's rise to power, in the most technologically advanced nation in Europe, and the circumstances surrounding Jack's descent into inhumanity are so disparate that, again, the comparison is seriously weak. Yes, Jack creates a dysfunctional and brutal environment; no, he is not Hitler.