Answer:
Proper nouns are always capitalized in English, no matter where they fall in a sentence. Because they endow nouns with a specific name, they are also sometimes called proper names. Every noun can be classified as either common or proper. A common noun is the generic name for one item in a class or group.
Explanation:
<em>A sentence</em> refers to the pair of words which is complete in itself. In other words, a sentence contains a subject and a predicate or it may contain a main clause and one or more subordinate clauses to convey a command, exclamation, question or statement.
In the following statements, the sentences have subject and predicate,
B. The ferret has a silly look on its face.
<em>'The ferret'</em>- subject
<em>'has a silly look on its face'</em>- predicate
C. I really do like spinach.
<em>'I'</em> - subject
<em>'really do like spinach'</em>- predicate
D. The men’s bathroom is out of order.
<em>'The men’s bathroom'</em>- subject
<em>'is out of order'</em>- predicate
Hence, the sentence 'Winding up the pole' doesn't have a subject that's why it is not a sentence.
D. The "fast food mentality," as Mr. Schlosser calls it, has also defaced America's landscape, helped wipe out its small businesses and independent farmers and homogenized people's taste buds to a lowest common denominator.
Answer:
3rd person
Explanation:
Third person is when the narrator is telling the story, not the main character.
The answers are B, C, D, E