The correct answer is A. both connotative and denotative.
There will be a lot of words where the denotative meaning should actually be ignored and the connotative observed, but that does not mean that both are not present.
Answer:
Was the article read by you?
this is the indirect form of speech
Explanation:
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The universe constantly and obediently answers to our conceptions; whether we travel fast or slow, the track is laid for us.
Her distraught mother had spent all night waiting by the phone.
Food was more a distraction than a desire.
He felt a wave of apprehension and accelerated heart beat as the door opened.
Driving 100 mph in a 55 mph zone is an transgression.
Your question is incomplete because you have not provided the underlined pronoun. Thus, the complete sentence is the following:
Nathan told Nadir that <u>his</u> nerves would impact the horse's ability to carry them through the competition.
Answer:
Case: nominative
Reference: ambiguous
Sentence rewritten: After seeing that Nadir was nervous, Nathan told him that nerves would impact the horse's ability to carry them through the competition.
Explanation:
The possessive adjective his functions as nominative case because the noun phrase his nerves functions as the subject of a verb. Besides, it creates ambiguity because it is not clear whose nerves it refers to - Nathan or Nadir's. As a result, it is necessary to rewrite the sentence to clarify whose nerves affect the horse's performance.