I also need help with this question
Answer:
ordinary overachiever
Explanation:
An oxymoron is a figure of speech which seems to have contradictory terms appears in conjunction.
Answer: Her crisp meat pies and cool lemonade, when joined to her miraculous ability to be in two places at one time, assured her business success.
Explanation:
The book <em>I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings</em> is an autobiography of Maya Angelou where she talks about her childhood experiences. Momma is Maya's grandmother and her guardian for most of her childhood.
Even though she was strict, she loved Maya dearly and Maya was proud of her grandmother. One instance of this is where she speaks in exultant tones of her grandmother's business success in selling lunches which was made possible by her being able to make delicious pastry as well as her ability to serve many customers by seemingly being in two places at once.
If the underlined phrase is <em>born in New York in 1856, </em>then that would be a participial phrase, which often functions as an adjective in a sentence, like is the case here.
Gerund is always used as a noun, and infinitive has the form <em>to + verb </em>(to go, to be...)
Answer: I think it would be “her books off the table”
Explanation: that’s the only phrase that makes sense mark me brainliest if I’m correct