I can relate to you kinda except I don’t like math but math basically can be challenging and I think if you understand it it’s fun also math is meant to try to figure out things because it’s a challenging subject for me personally but yea I guess you could say math is meant to help us figure out stuff easily or may be hard sometimes but that is life isn’t it. I love reading I agree I love just picturing things or like fantasying I’m there when I read I think reading is lots of fun because I can read about stuff I may never heard about before. And I like to vent sometimes because I have a lot of stuff on my mind so I can relate too you!
Answer: Local destination means traveling to nearby places and/or cities and national destination means traveling out of the country.
Explanation:
Answer:
appositive
Explanation:
An appositive renames the noun it refers to. Here, we're 'renaming' Dr. Benton Jones to "winner of the Nobel Prize." You could refer to him by either 'name' ('Dr. Jones' or 'winner of the Nobel Prize') going forward.
Answer:
Phrase, Idiom or Sentence
Explanation:
A sequence of words that form a meaning can be a phrase, idiom or a sentence.
A phrase is a group of words that form a meaning. It can be a combination of a preposition and a noun, or an adjective and a noun. <em>Prepositional phrase</em> is for example "in the air", and an <em>adjectival phrase</em> is "a beautiful girl".
An idiom is a phrase that when formed, changes the meaning of the words in a phrase. For example,<em> "It's raining cats and dogs".</em> This sentence doesn't mean that literally cats and dogs fall from the sky, but it has a different meaning, which is <em>"It is heavily raining." </em>
A sentence is a group of words that must consist of at least subject and a verb, which can be followed by other words or phrases. For example, a phrase is <em>"a beautiful girl"</em> - it cannot be a sentence because it doesn't have a verb. If we say <em>"A beautiful girl is here."</em> - we make a sentence, because now it has a <em>subject (A beautiful girl), a verb (is) and a preposition of place (here). </em>