That’s a statement not a question
<span>When the heat of the sun shines on the water in oceans, lakes, rivers and streams, the water evaporates, rising up into the air as water vapor. As it moves higher into the sky, it cools. The cooled water vapor begins to form liquid drops, which gather together as clouds. This process is called condensation.</span>
Answer:
A proper version of this text would be the following.
"The reporter failed to notice the discrepancies in the report that the congressmen had presented because him and his staff successfully diverted the media's attention to other issues"
Explanation:
The use of the past perfect indicates a past action which happened before another past action. In this way, it helps us organize the different events that took place. First, the congressmen presented the report, later on, the reporter failed to notice the discrepancies in it. On the other hand, "him" is the subject of the sentence and "his" in "his staff" is a possesive pronoun. In this case, the subject must always go in the first place and the possesive pronoun in the second place.
B because if you switch the words in the sentence, 'he' would fit, not him.
He folded fewer towels than you.
<span>Speaking
in the first-person plural (technical term for "we"), the speaker in
the hymn declares that it's time to get our praising on.
God is the
subject of this poetic awe and admiration, but he doesn't appear as just
"God." Heck no. This line gets the metaphors going with
"heaven-kingdom's Guardian." "Heaven-kingdom" is an example of a
specific form of Anglo-Saxon compound word called a kenning (see more
under "Imagery."). Keep your eyes open for more examples.
And while
you're at it: Mind the Gap! That cavernous space dividing the line in
half is called a caesura, or pause, and it helps to organize each line's
orderly system of stresses and alliteration (for more, see "Form and
Meter").
he Measurer's might and his mind-plans,
Hope it helps.
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