The sentence that has a correct subject-verb agreement is:
A) My cousin, along with two friends, is arriving today.
<span>Explanation: The words ‘along with, besides, as well as, not, etc.’ separates the subject from the verb. These words are not a part of the subject. These words should be ignored. A singular verb should be used if the subject singular.</span>
Answer: B
Explanation:
It's B because it provides strong evidence and a back bone to your claim.
Answer:
Option a
Explanation:
Dr. King echoes a Biblical allusion from Psalms 30:5—“weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning”--when he says, "it came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of their captivity,” meaning how like joyous daybreak was the moment when the dark night of slavery was over. (King).
Answer: The cat was ran over by the yellow car.
Explanation:
When we use passive voice, we place focus on an object/person that experiences an action, instead of the object/person that performs the action (as in active voice). The object in the active sentence thus becomes the subject in the passive sentence.
The yellow car ran over <u>the cat.</u>
<u>The cat</u> was ran over by the yellow car.
As evident in this example, a passive construction consists of <em>verb to be (was)</em> + <em>past participle (ran).</em>
Answer:
Claudette Colvin feared that she would get in further trouble for resisting racism, so she kept her brave actions a secret from most of her life. Claudette Colvin, like many women during the Civil Rights Movement, was denied recognition for her heroic actions because of her gender.
Explanation: