Celestial - Relating to the sky
Sagacity- The capacity to reason, judge, and act intelligently
Conjecture - To form an opinion without strong evidence
Interpose - To come between two things, to interrupt
Answer:
The correct answer is <u>C</u>: predicate nominative.
Explanation:
Will's problem was <u>that he didn't know how to register for classes.</u>
Predicate nominative represents a group of words that completes a linking verb and renames the subject. A predicate nominative can be found after a linking verb.
In our example, the subject would be <em>Will's problem</em>, the linking verb would be <em>was</em>, while the rest of the sentence would represent a predicate nominative.
I believe that there are mostly advantages when it comes to this. Some advantages include higher household wages because a family where both parents (assuming a heterosexual relationship) are in the workforce, the household would be much more successful than if one parent was depending on the other. There are economic advantages, more people in the workforce, lower unemployment rate, higher productivity within citizens overall. We live in a world that is consistently advancing technologically, AI generated housekeeper robots may be something that may come sooner than we think. I have a robot that sweeps my floor and can be programmed to clean only on the hours that I am asleep. In a family, everyone should clean up after themself and do their part to maintain a nice and neat household. It is the responsibility of everybody that lives in the house not just the woman (if there even is a woman, because same sex relationships and single men exist).
Answer:
Explanation:
Remark
I'm not sure there is a misplaced modifier, but there still is a problem. Students are 3rd person, you is second person. It is more common to use you in this instance. According to the new rules, you will not be allowed access to computers only if you arrive before 9 p.m.
Marginally I don't think According to the new rules is a dangling modifier. Others may not agree. You can get rid of the beginning of the sentence if you are not sure.
Answer: The new rules just came out. Those rules say that you will not be allowed access to the computers if you arrive later than 9:00 p.m.