Answer:
The participle is Competing
Explanation:
A Participle is characterized as the non-finite form of the verb that is employed to denote a past or presently ongoing action which can also act as an adjective or adverb to modify a noun or verb. In the given sentence,"Competing" is the present Participle and it ends with "ing". The word looks like an adjective in the sentence. "Competing" modifies the noun "Teams" in the sentence.
The sonnet was written around the time of spring, which came after a long winter period.
'Cause during the poem, the author wrote that the winter is long and somewhat tiring... And so on, spring is around the corner and the animals we're eating, sleeping. Doing their regular, normal schedule, as well as the plants, with their photosynthesis and all. The poem talks about the outgoing of winter and the arrival of spring.
~
- Akamatsu
Answer:
a. A word that has the same meaning as another
Explanation:
A synonym is a word that has the same meaning as another, like "to end" and "to finish".
These are very useful when you write a text and want to avoid repeating the same word over and over. Just have to be careful though, because synonyms have the same general meaning... but each word has a specific meaning, that's why it was created in the first place.
<u>Option B</u>, a word that has the opposite meaning as another,<u> is an antonym,</u> not a synonym.
The evaluation essay is correct answer
B. On the fire escape sit two stray cats
A general rule is that subject has to match verb.
(A) is wrong because one rabbit HOPS, not hop
(C) is wrong because two lands WERE at war, not was
(D) is wrong because they HAVE, not has
(B) is correct because two stray cats sit
*notice that when there's an "s" in the noun, or if the noun is plural, then the verb lacks an "s", and when there isn't an "s" at the end of the noun (it's singular), then the verb DOES have an "s". This is the rule of thumb (there are exceptions though)
<span />