The answer is B, hope this helps ;)
Answer:Singular persons Multiple persons
My Bag Our Bag
Your Bag Your Bag
Bag Bag
('fusion letter)
Singular persons Multiple persons
School (u) m School (u) banana
School (u) n Your School (u)
School Schools
Singular persons Multiple persons
Pencil (i) m our pencil (i)
Item (i) n Your Item (i)
Pen Pens
Properties of Possessive Pronouns
1. The third person singular suffix (-i) in possessive pronouns should not be confused with the case suffix (-i) of the noun.
If the suffix (-i) replaces the noun, it is a pronoun, if not, it is a case.
SAMPLE:
"His pen is gone."
-i = possessive pronoun (indicates the owner of the pen.)
"We bought the pen before."
-i = state suffix
*** The case suffix of the noun (-i) and the possessive pronoun (-i) are used together in the same word. In this case, the first greeting (-i) becomes the possessive pronoun. Then it comes out.
SAMPLE:
He gave me his pen.
-i = possessive pronoun
n = fusion letter
-i = state suffix
He sold his house.
-i = possessive pronoun
n = fusion letter
-i = state suffix
Explanation:I found this way I hope it's true have a nice day
Answer:
C) He likes to imagine himself doing what the heroes do.
Explanation:
In "Star Food" by Ethan Canin, the protagonist Dade was expected to help out in his father's grocery store. But one incident where he let a woman steal from the store led to his father's decision to hire a guard. By the end of the story, Dade still feels like a loser, but claims that he did not regret letting go of the thief.
Looking back from memory, Dade describes how he used to stare at the sky. His mother is of the opinion that her son will achieve "<em>limited fame</em>" while his father wants him to be there in the shop. He also narrates how his father will take them to the movies, "<em>sit[ting] in the front row of the theater</em>". He loves seeing movies and always "<em>imagined [himself] doing everything the heroes did—deciding to invade at daybreak, swimming half the night against the seaward current</em>".
Make the last sentences of each paragraph end the current paragraph and introduce the next one, so they will be together and not different
The ballad convention that Dudley Randall uses in "Ballad of Birmingham" is A) using an innocent questioner and a wise respondent.