The sentence "Good morning to the world!" is an C. exclamatory sentence.
It is easy to recognize this type of a sentence because there is an
exclamation mark at the end, which is how you know this is an
exclamatory sentence. Imperative sentences give some kind of an order,
declarative sentences just give information, and interrogative sentences
ask a question.
The correct answer is A. Because it is the only correct sentence.
In B, it should say - Has anyone wanted...
In C, it should say - Does anyone want...
In D, it should say - Was anyone going...
Because anyone agrees with a verb in singular form, and A is the only such sentence.
Answer:
A. Personification; it supports the imagery of night and dawn, sleep, and awakening.
Explanation:
Answer:
1.D
2. A
3. C
4. A
5. C
6.B
7.B
8.B
9.B
10. A
Explanation:
1) "Her newborn always gets hungry. During the night" is a fragment because due to the fact that it has a punctuation mistake, the sentence is incomplete and senseless.
2)"Under her pillow" it has no verb and no subject. This makes the sentence ungrammatical and senseless, and the reader expects something more from it. The correct use of punctuation as well as the components of a sentence are necessary to create a sentence with meaning and natural to read.
3) It is a fragment because of the punctuation mistake that it contains. The correct form will be "even though going to college will be expensive, Asher has decided to apply". The comma separate independent clauses from the main clause.
4) Option A expresses an action and a reason that explains it. It is not necessary to have any punctuation mark in this sentence.
5) In this case, "planting an herb garden and painting the living room" is a fragment because it begins with a verb while the natural order of the components of a sentence is: subject+ verb+object.
6) Option B has a fragment because "smoking less last month" does not have a subject.
7) Option B is grammatically correct and it makes sense. It is no necessary any punctuation mark because "to join the army" is an adverbial of purpose. Generally, this type of adverbials do not need a comma.
8) The sixth-graders wrote letters to their senator about the proposed cuts to next year’s school budget to make their voices heard.
You join both clauses by removing the period in order to give the second clause a subject.
9) Option B lacks in verb and contains a punctuation mistake.
10) It has no punctuation mistake. Colon is used to make a list.