I believe you should omit Sport because the sentence still makes sense that in Argentina Soccer is everyone's favourite.
Idk why? Oh is his a riddle or no?
Answer:
Explanation:
Look, I'm not going to write you a full intro paragraph... but I can help you structure it
Start with a hook:
For this, I think that an interesting fact would be good
Here are some examples
Did you know that 31% of students who participate in extracurricular activities have a GPA of 3.0 or higher whereas only 11% of those who do not have a similar GPA.
Often, students worry that extracurricular activities will distract them from their work, however, they have many benefits of participating in such activities.
Now write the bridge / thesis
As a student who participates in multiple extracurricular activities, I can definitely see the connection. Extracurriculars are a fun way to learn and grow outside of school by teaching us new skills and boosting our academics. Extracurricular activities teach us leadership, teamwork, dedication, and much more which all help us, not only excel at the activity and school, but also in the real world.
Now take this, and make it better, this is more of the structure than the full on paragraph
I did not really list main points since that is based off of your opinion, not mine
Hope I helped!
1. Assuming the underlined word is 'discarded,' the correct answer is verb. Participles are used in three ways: as an adjective, as an adverb, or as a part of a complex tense (such as present continuous). Given that past simple (used in this sentence) is a simple tense, it is a verb rather than a participle.
2. Assuming the underlined word is 'camping,' the correct answer is participle. Based on my explanation above, you can understand why it is a participle rather than a verb. So, it is used in a complex tense (past perfect continuous + it ends in -ing) which means that it cannot be a verb. If the entire phrase was underlined (had been camping), that would be a verb.
3. Assuming the underlined word is 'cooking,' the correct answer is participle. Although participles and gerunds look the same (both end in -ing), there is a difference between them. Gerunds are only used as nouns, whereas participles are used as either adjectives or adverbs. Here, the word 'cooking' is an adjective, which means it is a participle rather than a gerund.