Depending on the sentence content, there are four ways to puncuate a compound sentence with two independent clauses -
Use a semicolon
Use a semicolon and a transition word (however, therefore)
Use a colon
Use a comma and coordinating conjunction (and, but, for)
Answer:
it is the person or thing to or for whom verbs action is done
You should always look for the questions that may give off the idea that he/she is trying to persuade you. Also statements. For example, "My whole family loves to eat apples. You should try Granny Smith Apples they taste amazing!"
Answer:
able to be observed
Explanation:
Thus question refers to excrept from Mark Twain's novel "Roughing It".
The word "perceptible" would most effectively be explained as "capable of being perceived" and it originates from Latin word "percipere" which means to understand, to know something with one's senses.
In the paragraph 1, this word is used in a sentence " The snow lay so deep on the ground that there was no sign of a road perceptible...".
That basically means that, because of the snow, the road could not be seen, observed or recognized.