you answer is brainstorming a topic hope this helps.
Had no place to stay nearby.
Real old, abandoned mansion.
There was a tumble-down plantation house on the hill.
Seemed to John he'd heard the place was haunted.
Seemed to John he'd heard the place was haunted.
In "Better Wait Till Martin Comes," when the cats repeatedly pick up red hot coals,
it proves that the cats are ordinary and will not harm John.
it distracts the reader from worrying about Martin's arrival.
it builds suspense by showing that the cats are fearless.
it calms the reader by repeating a familiar action.
it builds suspense by showing that the cats are fearless.
Answer:
I don't notice any grammatical errors.
Explanation:
Answer:
Your answer would be D.
Explanation:
The sentence that contains a dangling modifier is D. A dangling modifier is a word or phrase that modifies a word not clearly stated in the sentence. In the sentence above, "preparing for the experiment" is a present participle expressing an action but does not name the doer of the action. In English sentences, the doer of the action must be the subject of the main sentence. However, the doer of the action is not "several slides" (the subject of the main clause). Slides do not have volition, so they can't prepare an experiment.
As the doer of the action is not clearly stated, the participle phrase is said to be dangling. Consequently, you should name the appropriate or logical doer of the action as the subject of the main clause. In this case, it could be an NP such as "the scientist" or you can turn the whole sentence into a when clause --> When the scientist was preparing the experiment, several slides...
Answer:
I mean yeah but its not gonna make people listen, some of them of course. I will because I wanna be really respectful to people
Explanation: