Answer:
bib·li·o·phile
/ˈbiblēəˌfīl/
Learn to pronounce
noun
a person who collects or has a great love of books.
Similar:
book lover
bookworm
bibliomaniac
bibliomane
bibliolater
Explanation:
1. The correct answer is S-V-N.
S refers to subject, and if you take a look at the sentence, you will see that the subject IT comes first. It is then followed by V, which stands for verb. In this sentence, the verb is IS. The verb is followed by a noun phrase HYBRID CAR, which is a predicate nominative (a noun or phrase following a linking verb). Predicate nominatives are written as N.
2. The correct answer is S-V-A.
The layout of this sentence is similar to the first sentence. First, we have the subject (S) TRADITIONAL GAS-POWERED CARS, then we have the verb (V) ARE, which is later followed by an adjective phrase HARMFUL TO THE ENVIRONMENT. This phrase is a predicate adjective (an adjective or adjectival phrase following a linking verb), which is written as A.
3. The correct answer is S-V-O.
This is the most common structure of sentences in the English language. First, we have the subject HYBRIDS, then we have the verb PRODUCE, and then we have the direct object LESS POLLUTION, and later a phrase that we don't need to name. The object of a sentence is determined by asking the question What? (What do hybrids produce? - Less pollution), and it is written as O. IO stands for indirect object, which doesn't appear here.
Answer:
Yes but don't
Explanation:
It completely depends on what you are saying. "At all" is usually used in negative statements like "you can't cook 'at all'" but it is possible to use it positively. However I would play it safe and just not use it when talking positive.
The answer is "She was sick of segregation"
In Montgomery, the capital of Alabama, the first rows of buses were, by law, reserved for white passengers. Behind them were the seats where the blacks could sit. On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks took one of these buses on her way home from work and sat down at one of the places in the middle of the bus. When the driver-white-demanded that she and three other blacks rise to give way to whites who had entered the bus, Parks refused to comply with the order. She remained seated and was therefore arrested and taken to prison.
Rosa Parks' silent protest against segregation spread rapidly. The Women's Political Council organized a boycott of urban buses as a protest against racial discrimination in the country. Martin Luther King Jr. was one of those who supported the action. Activist and musician Harry Belafonte recalls how his life changed after the day King telephoned him to call for support for the action of the woman who became known as the "mother of civil rights movements" in the United States.
That’s so sweet and thoughtful!