Answer:D
Explanation:
I had a theme that was one word before. I gave it to my teacher (who went to Cambridge) and I got an A+
Answer:
Shel Silverstein
Explanation:
An antecedent can be regarded as thing that stand in place of a word that is been used previously. When a pronoun is used in reffering to a particular thing earlier in a sentence (
antecedent). There should be agreement in term of numbers i.e singular/plural with what it's reffering to.
Therefore, the antecedent of the pronoun " her" is Shel Silverstein
Yes, it is B, it is a defining relative clause, notice that without the relative clause the sentence feels empty <em>Only the players are going to get sunburned today. </em>
Defining relative clauses use <em>who/that</em> for people, <em>which/that</em> for things and they are not delimited by commas.
<em>Only the people that/who arrived first can enter.</em>
<em>This the house that/which I used to live in.</em>
Non-defining clauses are just extra comments, optionally they can be removed about the previous noun/pronoun, they are separed by commas and <em>that</em> cannot be used.
<em>Mary,who wears glasses, lives next door.</em>
<em>This country, which was a super power in the past, is still facing amajor economic crisis.</em>
The rising action of this play is part of Act I and Act II and starts with Biff telling Happy that he is going to ask an old employer, Bill Oliver, for money to start a business. In the kitchen when Willy and Linda are talking, she asks him to ask his boss, Howard, for a job in New York so he does not have to travel.