D: to deacribe a tough gyt falling in love
You didn't italize or mark the phrase, but I see one good candidate:
"The circus animal trainer" is in a way another name given to Mervin, a kind of "renaming" him: this is called an appositive phrase, so if this was the phrase appositive phrase is the answer! (also, I don't see the other phrases here).
The answer is D because it can also be two separate sentences
Answer: Percy loves to be in the water, he can hold his breath underwater with little to no problems at all. He can read greek easily which he thought at first was a reading disability.
Percy has never been "normal" in his life. What does "normal" mean anyway? Well, it probably doesn't refer to somebody who has attended six different schools in six years. That's right – Percy has a knack for getting kicked out of school. It's not his fault, though. You see, trouble seems to find him wherever he goes. He's a trouble magnet, no matter how hard he tries to keep cool and make himself invisible. Take, for example, his school trip to the New York museum:
I