Answer:
Inappropriate shift in <u>pronoun </u><u>person</u>:
• I like living on the beach where
you can hear the waves.
• When the Stewart brothers were
kids, you had to take the long
road to school.
Inappropriate shift in <u>pronoun </u><u>numbers</u>:
• I washed the shirts and the dress
and dried it in the sun.
•The farmer fed the cows and
gave it water to drink.
Since apposition means that all sentences have something in common, we combine it to get this: This year's winner is Jada, and she is a poet from Guam. Ginny, my oldest cousin, knows Jada. They went to Bickham together. I submitted my poem about stars. Will it arrive on May 14?
How to identify the simple subject of the sentence:
(1) There is a word that functions as an adverb of place. In the sentence, it is used in front position. It refers to the subject.
(2) "Are" is the be verb.
(3) "Too" is an adverb modifying the adjective "many".
(4) "Many" is an adjective modifying the noun.
(5) "People" is the simple subject.
(6) "On this elevator" is a prepositional phrase.
If you want to have the complete subject, it is "too many people."
Aegis means support, backing or protection. So were someone to say they "Live under the aegis of the constitution." they would be saying that they are protected or supported by the rules placed upon us by our founders.
They're both stories they're both interesting and unusually (usually) there are similar emotions in the characters both can be written using same style (fast and riveting or mellow and deep) both can sell like mad.Nonfiction and Fiction they have dialogues they have character but in nonfiction they are real ad in fiction they are not. They both attend an aspect of writing