One day I was lazy and I decided that I didn’t want to study for the English test I had the next day. I played video games, watched TV, and hung out with friends. The next morning I finished breakfast and got to school just fine. The time came to take the test and the teacher handed out the papers. We had forty minutes to complete the test. I looked down at the paper and couldn’t answer any of the problems. At the end of the class, I went to my teacher with an empty paper and apologized for not studying and failing th test. She let me do a retake the next day. From that day on, I always studied for any test I ever took again.
I have done this befor i am 90% sure it is b
Answer:
Use of determiner pronouns, "which," "who," "whose," and "where" in subordinate sentences:
1. which
2. who
3. which
4. which
5. which
6. who
7. whose
8. where
Explanation:
Thus, the attached passage can be filled with the above pronouns as follows:
"A wild sheep chase" is the extraordinary novel (0) WHICH brought its author, Haruki Murakami, to public attention. The book, (1) __which____ is set in Japan, begins simply enough. A young man (2) ___who____ works for an advertisement agency gets a postcard from a friend. He decides to use the postcard, (3) ___which_____ shows a photo of a country scene, for an advertisement (4) ___which______ his company is making. However, he doesn't notice that in the photo there is a sheep (5) ___which______ has a star on its back. This photo attracts the attention of a strange man in black, (6) __who______ offers him a choice – find the sheep or lose everything. The search for the sheep takes the main character, (7) __whose______ name is never revealed, from Tokyo to the mountains of northern Japan, (8) ___where_____ he has to face a number of dangers.
Still I can say that idioms, phrasal verbs (most of them) can be good examples of figurative speech language ..
If this is what you mean ...
Best Luck!
Wise
Answer: they fail to accomplish if she wins or not and how the ending goes and they don't talk about a mockingbird at all.