Answer:
hmmm I think there is no good answer because I don't even know what the words even say
Explanation:
The answer says it all
Answer:
When there is NOT an interrogative present in the question, the verb comes after the subject/object of the sentence.
Explanation:
The rule used to form interrogative questions is very similar to the 'yes' or 'no' questions' rule. The verb precedes (comes before) the subject of the sentence, and the interrogative word precedes (comes before) the verb. That's why if there is no interrogative in the question, the verb would come after the object/subject.
Hope this helps! :)
Answer:
correct the sentence is in good grammar and completes the sentence without error
Key: You/Me is talking in quotation marks (",")
Your friend talks in no quotation marks
"Hi Jerry." Hi Jake, how are you today? "I'm good, how are you." Good thanks for asking. What classes do you have? "I have Math, then Science, then ELA (English Language Arts), then Social Studies. What do you have?" I have Social Studies, then Science, then Math, then ELA. "Hey, we both have a class together." Yeah that's cool. Describe what you have for class "I have a yellow pencil, and I need a pink eraser. What about you?" I have a pink eraser, and I need a yellow pencil. "Ok well I have to get to class, see you later." Goodbye, see you after school.