The complete adjective clause in the sentence is F. that I have prepared.
An adjective clause usually starts with who, whom, when, where, why, that or which. Most often it provides more information and description; however, it will not change the meaning of the sentence.
The correct answer is c) past.
Past (preposition) - from one side to the other of something, or in front of something.
Rephrased: He passed his grandmother's house on his way to school.
Passed - from the verb <em>to pass</em>, past tense, coudln't be used in this sentence.
Passet is not a word.
Pasted - past form of the verb <em>to paste, </em>does not fit in the context.
<span>Many teens enjoy visiting the mall after school. Because it is the only indisputable statement in the choices.
"</span><span>The only reason people like malls is the air conditioning." is not a fact because it can be disputed. If it was the true case, people would just sit at malls without buying anything
"</span><span>There are too many shoe stores at the mall."-"too many" is difficult to explain and so it can be disputed
"</span><span>Shopping is every teenager’s favorite activity." Many teenagers love shopping but every one them has shopping has their favorite activity.</span>