well honestly when u search it up there's 2 different things, something about Frankenstein
and then there's this
"Henry Clerval. Friend and schoolfellow of Victor and Elizabeth from childhood; murdered by the Creature. Victor describes him as an only child, "the son of a merchant of Geneva, an intimate friend of my father. ... Much later, Clerval accompanies Frankenstein on what is to be a two-year tour of Europe"
The sentence <em>After I put away the dishes, I did some laundry </em>is a complex sentence, because it consists of one independent clause (I did some laundry) and one dependent/subordinate clause (after I put away the dishes).
Is there any specific way the answer should be answered and if so please provide and I will definitely help.
The correct answers would be: a noun or adjective. An appositive may be a noun or an adjective, and may include modifiers.
If an appositive is omitted from a sentence, it destroys the whole sentence. This statement is FALSE, option b. An appositive is often set off by a pair of commas because it is just an added information, and does not affect the whole thought of the sentence if omitted.