Your answer is Direct address...this is why...
<span>direct address is the name of the person (normally) who is being directly spoken to. It is always a proper noun.
A participle phrase </span><span>is a verbal ending in -ing (present) or -ed, -en, -d,
-t, -n, or -ne (past) that functions as an adjective, modifying a noun
or pronoun. A participial phrase consists of a participle plus modifier(s), object(s), and/or complement(s).
</span>
Prepositional phrase a modifying phrase consisting of a preposition and its object.
Indirect address is <span>a address that serves as a reference point instead of the address to the direct location</span>
<span />
A.) herman melville.................... sorry it needed 20 characters
Answer:
2. I wanted to go to the movie he wanted to stay home.
Explanation:
Here are all the ways to correct the error; study them well.
I wanted to go to the movie. He wanted to stay home.
I wanted to go to the movie; he wanted to stay home.
I wanted to go to the movie, but he wanted to stay home.
I wanted to go to the movie. He, however, wanted to stay home.
I wanted to go to the movie; however, he wanted to stay home.
Although I wanted to go to the movie, he wanted to stay home.
Answer:
The best answer is C. Morphemes.
Explanation:
Morphemes are the smallest parts of speech which make sense, such as prepositions like "in", "of", or even prefixes like "de", "un", among others. When people are about to produce sentences they use their "mind data" to put morphemes together in order to produce phrases, words, clauses, sentences with different meanings and contexts. That is the reason for people to replace and/or mistake one phrase and/or morpheme here and there in their speech, because they may change sentence constructions or even word constructions at the real time building.