The correct subordinating conjunction is "yet" and the sentence is completed as follows:
Mandy practiced karate every day, yet she failed to beat her final opponent.
The word "yet" is a subordinating conjunction that means "nevertheless" or "however", it is associated with negative statements in order to mention that an event did not take place.
In this sentence, it explains that even though Mandy had practiced she did not beat her opponent.
Answer:
Explanation:
It's compound
The first sentence: My father is going to retire next year.
Second sentence: My mother is going to keep working
Third sentence: (so) they can pay the bills without worrying.
The last entry is the hard one. So in that sentence is a conjunction and it means consequently. But is it a subordinate or a coordinate conjunction?
It think it is a coordinate conjunction. The sentence <em>they can pay the bills without worrying </em>is a complete thought that stands alone. Therefore the three clauses are all major clauses.
Its c you can thank me later ;)
Answer:
B. Your employee handbook included some safety tips.
Explanation:
All the other answers contain bias by using subjective phrasing. D. might seem objective but the quotations implies a sense of doubt or negative connotation.