B. Universality
When we look at the sentence, “Ulysses is about an average
day for an ordinary man,” what we see is that the story can technically have
the setting of a regular, commonplace day, a day in which nothing out of the
ordinary occurs. We can also see that
the story is about a man that can pretty much be any person. What this communicates is that it can
probably be about anybody and occur on any day, which gives it the air of
universality.
Answer:
Explanation:
A series circuit is a circuit like a parallel circuit, but the way you use them can be different.
Reason: A series circuit; imagine if you set up a circuit but one of the wires used was cut, the whole circuit would fail, unlike a parallel circuit, which has many 'layers' of circuit in positions going after the previous, yet if one wire was cut, the whole circuit would still work altogether, though the current may split.
The question is incomplete because it does not provide any options, which are the following:
A. She likes fish, so I think she will like sushi.
B. If you like strawberries, you will like burritos.
C. He likes to read, so I'm sure he will enjoy the library.
D. If you like steak and potatoes, you will like this stew.
Answer:
B. If you like strawberries, you will like burritos.
Explanation:
Non sequitur refers to a stated conclusion that is not necessarily a logical result of the facts presented. In the answer, the fact that all the houses in the area are expensive does not necessarily imply that they are well-built.
Other examples of non sequitur are:
<em>I've lived in this town for a long time and my grandfather was the first mayor, so I'm against putting fluoride in the drinking water!</em>
<em />
<em>Matt likes cooking, which involves food, so he should work at a grocery store.</em>
Answer:
Gerunds and gerund phrases always function as nouns.
They can act as subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, predicate nominatives, or objects of a preposition in a sentence.
Answer:
Correct
Explanation:
the reason to this being the fact that Brett, the main subject of this sentence, is prominently presented, and is following all the rules of nouns, and has correct syntax in the case of being in the early areas of the sentence. another is the fact that all the punctuation is proper, and if there needs to be emotion in this sentence, it can be expressed with both an ! or a full stop dot. and we will also consider all of lesser words in the sentence, but will mainly focus on the words 'very good'. now, this can sometimes not sound proper the more times you say it out loud, or in your head, but the truth is that it is grammatically correct. therefore, the entire sentence is correct, and no changes need to be made. and as for the syntax, it is on par with the correct terms and placements, as the subject and the predicate are both in their respective areas of the sentence, as mentioned above.