The sentence in which all pronouns are used correctly is C. I sat between him and her during the sales conference. A is incorrect because it shoud be "between you and me." B is incorrect because it should be "between her and me." D is incorrect because it should be "between him and me." Objective pronoun has to be used with the preposition <span>between.</span>
True
First-person point of view is when the narrator is a character within the story. A primary indicator that a written work is in first-person point of view is the use of first-person pronouns: I, me, my, myself. Wetherell's story "The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant" starts off "There was a summer in my life when the only creature that seemed lovelier to me than a largemouth bass was Sheila Mant. I was fourteen." Since this is narration and not dialogue, we know that the narrator is a character within the story. Gary Soto's "Oranges" begins "The first time I walked/With a girl, I was twelve". This narration uses the word "I" which shows that it is in first-person point of view.
James Monroe, fifth President of the United States. The Monroe Doctrine was declared in a few paragraphs of President James Monroe's seventh annual message to Congress on December 2, 1823.
FALSE. <span>An appositive DOES NOT function like an adverb in a given sentence
Appositive is defined as a noun or noun phrase that renames a noun beside it.
Example
Mrs. Santos, our teacher, is the best teacher in Math.
"our teacher" is the appositive phrase. It renames Mrs. Santos. </span>