Answer:
The adverbial phrase is " into a piece of wood"
Explanation:
The adverbial phrase that we can see in the sentence "Have you ever hammered a nail into a piece of wood" is an adverbial of place, this is used in the sentence with the same function as any adverb of place like backwards, behind, here, there, etc... it is easy to identify as an adverb or adverbial of place answers the question "where?".
Answer:
Joplin plan.
Explanation:
Basically it is a device for grouping children in the intermediate grades homogeneously on an interclass basis.
Hello! I found the choices for this one from another source. They are:
<span>A. II only
B. I and II
C.II and III
D. I and III
</span>
Out of the three given statements about quotation marks, only the first and third statements are true.
You use quotation marks to identify short quotations. Quotations that are longer than three/four lines have their own indented formatting and doesn't require the marks to separate them anymore.
Also, commas that introduce quotations are never inside quotation marks, since they are not part of the original quoted text anyway.
ANSWER: D. I and III
Macbeth's "tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow" speech in Act 5, scene 5 acts as Macbeth's farewell. In it he thinks about the meaning of life and decides that death is something that comes to everyone, people are all just walking the earth with no importance. "Signifying nothing" at the end refers to man's life, it means nothing, according to Macbeth. He relates a person's life to an actor who plays a part on a stage for a couple hours and then disappears, doesn't exist anymore.
This speech shows that he has essentially given up (in his mind) and thinks that life is meaningless.
Gulliver was searched by <span>the army</span>